This study examines carpometacarpal osteoarthritis (CMC OA) and aims to elucidate the biomechanical, neuromuscular, and somatosensory mechanisms that contribute to CMC OA symptoms by using orthopaedic biomechanics and quantitative pain testing. Completion of this study will provide a comprehensive dataset describing how movement strategies (muscle activity and joint posture) as well as experimental and clinical pain differ between individuals with CMC OA and age-matched controls.
This study was funded by that National Institutes of Health through KL2 TR001429 and was registered as a clinical trial at the request of the funding agency. The goal of this exploratory, career development project was to conduct an observational, cross-sectional study of individuals with and without carpometacarpal osteoarthritis (CMC OA). Interestingly, even though approximately a third of postmenopausal women have radiographic evidence of CMC OA, less than ten percent of all women visit the doctor with painful symptoms. This disconnect between radiographic evidence of disease and presence of painful, clinical symptoms makes CMC OA challenging to study. Here, participants were recruited into two groups: CMC OA and age-matched controls. Participants with CMC OA were defined as those recruited from orthopaedic clinics with a diagnosis of CMC OA. Age-matched controls were defined as those recruited from the community who reported during screening that they had no pain or clinical symptoms of CMC OA. All participants participated in two sessions, a biomechanics session to evaluate movement (muscle activity, joint posture) and a somatosensory testing session to evaluate pain sensitization. All participants also completed clinical outcome measures and a hand x-ray. Analyses were completed on two groups based on radiographic evidence of CMC OA: early-stage and end-stage. Note, participant assignment to the analysis groups did not necessarily match the recruitment groups, as some control subjects had radiographic evidence of end-stage CMC OA and some individuals with diagnosed CMC OA had radiographic evidence of early-stage disease. The goal of this study was to build a small, comprehensive dataset describing how movement strategies (muscle activity and joint posture) as well as experimental and clinical pain differ across individuals with CMC OA.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
31
Participants will perform range of motion (thumb only) to evaluate fine and gross motor function.
Participants will perform strength (pinch and grip) tests to evaluate fine and gross motor function.
UF Health of University of Florida
Gainesville, Florida, United States
Australian Canadian OA Hand Index (AUSCAN)
The AUSCAN assesses health status and health outcomes in osteoarthritis of the hand. Participants complete 15 questions targeting their pain, stiffness, and physical function using a 5-point scale. The pain section is scored from 0-20, stiffness from 0-4, and function from 0-10. Higher score indicates worse self-reported outcomes.
Time frame: Baseline
Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder, and Hand (DASH)
The DASH is a 30-item questionnaire that assesses an individual's ability to perform upper extremity activities. Participants rate the difficulty and interference of with daily life using a 5-point scale. Scores are reported from 0-100 with higher scores indicating worse self-reported outcomes.
Time frame: Baseline
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