Title of article
Do intra-articular therapies work and who will benefit most?
Author/Authors
Laure Gossec، نويسنده , , Maxime Dougados، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
14
From page
131
To page
144
Abstract
The main intra-articular (IA) treatments used in osteoarthritis are corticosteroids and hyaluronan injections. Data concerning their short- and long-term efficacy and their potential side-effects are reviewed here. IA corticosteroids are effective for reducing short-term pain and appear to have no long-term deleterious effects on the cartilage; they may be more efficacious in patients with joint effusion and/or symptom flares. IA hyaluronan have a modest but long-lived symptomatic effect on pain and functional outcome in knee osteoarthritis; the level of evidence is poor concerning their efficacy in other joints. The differences in efficacy related to the molecular weight of the hyaluronan are a subject of debate. There is a risk of acute painful reactions, which seem more frequent with higher-molecular-weight hyaluronan. Some data—mainly from animal studies—suggest a possible long-term chondroprotective effect of hyaluronan. This treatment seems more efficacious in non-radiologically severe osteoarthritis with no or mild effusion.
Keywords
Function , pain , corticosteroids , Hyaluronan , Osteoarthritis , Symptomatic , intra-articular , review.
Journal title
Best Practice and Research Clinical Rheumatology
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Best Practice and Research Clinical Rheumatology
Record number
467185
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