778 results on '"Niu, Jingbo"'
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2. Oral Anticoagulant Initiation in Patients With Kidney Failure on Hemodialysis Newly Diagnosed With Atrial Fibrillation (2007-2020): An Observational Study of Trends and Disparities
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Winkelmayer, Wolfgang C., Hu, Austin, Khairallah, Pascale, Airy, Medha, Erickson, Kevin F., Chang, Tara I., and Niu, Jingbo
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- 2024
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3. Hemodialysis Versus Peritoneal Dialysis Drug Expenditures: A Comparison Within the Private Insurance Market
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Bhatnagar, Anshul, Niu, Jingbo, Ho, Vivian, Winkelmayer, Wolfgang C., and Erickson, Kevin F.
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- 2023
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4. Patterns of Change Over Time in Knee Bone Shape Are Associated with Sex.
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Wise, Barton, Niu, Jingbo, Zhang, Yuqing, Liu, Felix, Pang, Joyce, Lynch, John, and Lane, Nancy
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Aged ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Health Status Disparities ,Humans ,Knee Joint ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Models ,Statistical ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Sex Factors ,Time Factors ,United States - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Knee osteoarthritis (OA) is more common in females than in males; however, the biological mechanisms for the difference in sex in patients with knee OA are not well understood. Knee shape is associated with OA and with sex, but the patterns of change in the bones shape over time and their relation to sex and OA are unknown and may help inform how sex is associated with shape and OA and whether the effect is exerted early or later in life.Questions/purposes (1) Does knee shape segregate stably into different groups of trajectories of change (groups of knees that share similar patterns of changes in bone shape over time)? (2) Do females and males have different trajectories of bone shape changes? (3) Is radiographic OA at baseline associated with trajectories of bone shape changes? METHODS: We used data collected from the NIH-funded Osteoarthritis Initiative (OAI) to evaluate a cohort of people aged 45 to 79 years at baseline who had either symptomatic knee OA or were at high risk of having it. The OAI cohort included 4796 participants (58% females; n = 2804) at baseline who either had symptomatic knee OA (defined as having radiographic tibiofemoral knee OA and answering positively to the question have you had pain, aching or stiffness around the knee on most days for at least one month during the past 12 months) or were at high risk of symptomatic knee OA (defined as having knee symptoms during the prior 12 months along with any of the following: overweight; knee injury; knee surgery other than replacement; family history of total knee replacement for OA; presence of Heberdens nodes; daily knee bending activity) or were part of a small nonexposed subcohort. From these participants, we limited the eligible group to those with radiographs available and read at baseline, 2 years, and 4 years, and randomly selected participants from each OAI subcohort in a manner to enrich representation in the study of the progression and nonexposed subcohorts, which were smaller in number than the OA incidence subcohort. From these patients, we randomly sampled 473 knees with radiographs available at baseline, 2 years, and 4 years. We outlined the shape of the distal femur and proximal tibia on radiographs at all three timepoints using statistical shape modelling. Five modes (each mode represents a particular type of knee bone shape variation) were derived for the proximal tibia and distal femurs shape, accounting for 78% of the total variance in shape. Group-based trajectory modelling (a statistical approach to identify the clusters of participants following a similar progression of change of bone shape over time, that is, trajectory group) was used to identify distinctive patterns of change in the bone shape for each mode. We examined the association of sex and radiographic OA at baseline with the trajectories of each bone shape mode using a multivariable polytomous regression model while adjusting for age, BMI, and race. RESULTS: Knee bone shape change trajectories segregated stably into different groups. In all modes, three distinct trajectory groups were derived, with the mean posterior probabilities (a measure of an individuals probability of being in a particular group and often used to characterize how well the trajectory model is working to describe the population) ranging from 84% to 99%, indicating excellent model fitting. For most of the modes of both the femur and tibia, the intercepts for the three trajectory groups were different; however, the rates of change were generally similar in each mode. Females and males had different trajectories of bone shape change. For Mode 1 in the femur, females were more likely to be in trajectory Groups 3 (odds ratio 30.2 [95% CI 12.2 to 75.0]; p < 0.001) and 2 than males (OR 4.1 [95% CI 2.3 to 7.1]; p < 0.001); thus, females had increased depth of the intercondylar fossa and broader shaft width relative to epicondylar width compared with males. For Mode 1 in the tibia, females were less likely to be in trajectory Group 2 (OR 0.5 [95% CI 0.3 to 0.9]; p = 0.01) than males (that is, knees of females were less likely to display superior elevation of tibial plateau or decreased shaft width relative to head width). Radiographic OA at baseline was associated with specific shape-change trajectory groups. For Mode 1 in the femur, knees with OA were less likely to be in trajectory Groups 3 (OR 0.4 [95% CI 0.2 to 0.8]; p = 0.008) and 2 (OR 0.6 [95% CI 0.3 to 1.0]; p = 0.03) than knees without OA; thus, knees with OA had decreased depth of the intercondylar fossa and narrower shaft width relative to epicondylar width compared with knees without OA. For Mode 1 in the tibia, knees with OA were not associated with trajectory. CONCLUSIONS: The shapes of the distal femur and proximal tibia did not change much over time. Sex and baseline knee radiographic OA status are associated with the trajectory of change in the bones shape, suggesting that both may contribute earlier in life to the associations among trajectories observed in older individuals. Future studies might explore sex-related bone shape change earlier in life to help determine when the sex-specific shapes arise and also the degree to which these sex-related shapes are alterable by injury or other events. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Level III, prognostic study.
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- 2020
5. Facility Closures and Distance Traveled to Receive Dialysis Care in the United States
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Niu, Jingbo, Worsley, Melandrea, Rosales, Omar, Oluyomi, Abiodun, and Erickson, Kevin F.
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- 2023
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6. Associations of Serum and Dialysate Potassium Concentrations With Incident Atrial Fibrillation in a Cohort Study of Older US Persons Initiating Hemodialysis for Kidney Failure
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Hu, Austin, Liu, Sai, Montez-Rath, Maria E., Khairallah, Pascale, Niu, Jingbo, Turakhia, Mintu P., Chang, Tara I., and Winkelmayer, Wolfgang C.
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- 2023
- Full Text
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7. Risk of Knee Osteoarthritis With Obesity, Sarcopenic Obesity, and Sarcopenia
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Misra, Devyani, Fielding, Roger A, Felson, David T, Niu, Jingbo, Brown, Carrie, Nevitt, Michael, Lewis, Cora E, Torner, James, Neogi, Tuhina, and study
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Pain Research ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Obesity ,Arthritis ,Chronic Pain ,Aging ,Nutrition ,Osteoarthritis ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Musculoskeletal ,Stroke ,Absorptiometry ,Photon ,Adipose Tissue ,Aged ,Body Composition ,Female ,Humans ,Incidence ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Muscle ,Skeletal ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Risk Factors ,Sarcopenia ,MOST study ,Clinical Sciences ,Immunology ,Public Health and Health Services ,Arthritis & Rheumatology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
ObjectiveObesity, defined by anthropometric measures, is a well-known risk factor for knee osteoarthritis (OA), but there is a relative paucity of data regarding the association of body composition (fat and muscle mass) with risk of knee OA. We undertook this study to examine the longitudinal association of body composition categories based on fat and muscle mass with risk of incident knee OA.MethodsWe included participants from the Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study, a longitudinal cohort of individuals with or at risk of knee OA. Based on body composition (i.e., fat and muscle mass) from whole-body dual x-ray absorptiometry, subjects were categorized as obese nonsarcopenic (obese), sarcopenic obese, sarcopenic nonobese (sarcopenic), or nonsarcopenic nonobese (the referent category). We examined the relationship of baseline body composition categories with the risk of incident radiographic OA at 60 months using binomial regression with robust variance estimation, adjusting for potential confounders.ResultsAmong 1,653 subjects without radiographic knee OA at baseline, significantly increased risk of incident radiographic knee OA was found among obese women (relative risk [RR] 2.29 [95% confidence interval {95% CI} 1.64-3.20]), obese men (RR 1.73 [95% CI 1.08-2.78]), and sarcopenic obese women (RR 2.09 [95% CI 1.17-3.73]), but not among sarcopenic obese men (RR 1.74 [95% CI 0.68-4.46]). Sarcopenia was not associated with risk of knee OA (for women, RR 0.96 [95% CI 0.62-1.49]; for men, RR 0.66 [95% CI 0.34-1.30]).ConclusionIn this large longitudinal cohort, we found body composition-based obesity and sarcopenic obesity, but not sarcopenia, to be associated with risk of knee OA. Weight loss strategies for knee OA should focus on obesity and sarcopenic obesity.
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- 2019
8. Bone shape mediates the relationship between sex and incident knee osteoarthritis
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Wise, Barton L, Niu, Jingbo, Zhang, Yuqing, Liu, Felix, Pang, Joyce, Lynch, John A, and Lane, Nancy E
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Epidemiology ,Health Sciences ,Osteoarthritis ,Aging ,Arthritis ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Musculoskeletal ,Aged ,Case-Control Studies ,Female ,Femur ,Humans ,Incidence ,Knee Joint ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Risk Factors ,Sex Distribution ,Sex Factors ,Tibia ,United States ,Knee ,Bone shape ,Sex ,Statistical shape modeling ,Radiography ,Clinical Sciences ,Orthopedics ,Clinical sciences ,Allied health and rehabilitation science ,Sports science and exercise - Abstract
BackgroundKnee bone shape differs between men and women and the incidence of knee osteoarthritis (OA) is higher in women than in men. Therefore, the purpose of the present study was to determine whether the observed difference in the incidence of knee radiographic OA (ROA) between men and women is mediated by bone shape.MethodsWe randomly sampled 304 knees from the OAI with incident ROA (i.e., development of Kellgren/Lawrence grade ≥ 2 by month 48) and 304 knees without incident ROA. We characterized distal femur and proximal tibia shape on baseline radiographs using Statistical Shape Modeling. If a specific bone shape was associated with the risk of incident ROA, marginal structural models were generated to assess the mediation effect of that bone shape on the relation of sex and risk of incident knee ROA adjusting for baseline covariates.ResultsCase and control participants were similar by age, sex and race, but case knees were from higher body mass index (BMI) participants (29.4 vs. 27.0; p
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- 2018
9. Brief Report: Leg Length Inequality and Hip Osteoarthritis in the Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study and the Osteoarthritis Initiative
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Kim, Chan, Nevitt, Michael, Guermazi, Ali, Niu, Jingbo, Clancy, Margaret, Tolstykh, Irina, Jungmann, Pia M, Lane, Nancy E, Segal, Neil A, Harvey, William F, Lewis, Cora E, and Felson, David T
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Immunology ,Chronic Pain ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Pain Research ,Aging ,Arthritis ,Osteoarthritis ,Musculoskeletal ,Reduced Inequalities ,Aged ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Female ,Humans ,Leg Length Inequality ,Logistic Models ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Odds Ratio ,Osteoarthritis ,Hip ,Prevalence ,Radiography ,Risk Factors ,Public Health and Health Services ,Arthritis & Rheumatology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
ObjectiveStudies suggest that persons with a leg length inequality (LLI) of ≥2 cm have an increased risk of developing knee osteoarthritis (OA) in that limb. The present study was undertaken to examine whether LLI also confers an increased risk of hip OA.MethodsUsing long limb radiographs from subjects in the Multicenter Arthritis Study (MOST) and the Osteoarthritis Initiative (OAI), we measured LLI and scored hip radiographs that were obtained at baseline and 3-5-year follow-up. The associations of LLI of ≥1 cm and LLI of ≥2 cm with radiographic hip OA were examined cross-sectionally and longitudinally, assessing risk in shorter limbs and longer limbs compared to limbs from subjects with no LLI. We carried out logistic regression analyses with generalized estimating equations and adjusted for age, sex, body mass index, height, and cohort of origin.ResultsThere were 1,966 subjects from the MOST and 2,627 subjects from the OAI. Twelve percent had LLI of ≥1 cm and 1% had LLI of ≥2 cm. For LLI ≥1 cm, the adjusted odds ratio for prevalent hip OA in the shorter leg was 1.47 (95% confidence interval [95% CI] 1.07-2.02) and for LLI ≥2 cm, it was 2.15 (95% CI 0.87-5.34). For LLI ≥1 cm, the odds of incident hip OA in the shorter leg were 1.39 (95% CI 0.81-2.39) while for LLI ≥2 cm, they were 4.20 (95% CI 1.26-14.03). We found no increased risk of hip OA in longer limbs.ConclusionOur findings suggest that, as with knee OA, legs that are at least 2 cm shorter than the contralateral leg are at increased risk of hip OA.
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- 2018
10. Affect and Incident Participation Restriction in Adults With Knee Osteoarthritis
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Vaughan, Molly W, LaValley, Michael P, Felson, David T, Orsmond, Gael I, Niu, Jingbo, Lewis, Cora E, Segal, Neil A, Nevitt, Michael C, and Keysor, Julie J
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Mental Health ,Pain Research ,Nutrition ,Aging ,Prevention ,Osteoarthritis ,Clinical Research ,Arthritis ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Musculoskeletal ,Activities of Daily Living ,Affect ,Aged ,Alabama ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,Cost of Illness ,Disability Evaluation ,Female ,Humans ,Iowa ,Knee Joint ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Prospective Studies ,Risk Factors ,Social Participation ,Time Factors ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology ,Clinical sciences ,Allied health and rehabilitation science - Abstract
ObjectiveParticipation restriction, common among people with knee osteoarthritis (OA), may be influenced by affect. We examined the risk of incident participation restriction over 84 months conferred by positive and negative affect among people with knee OA.MethodsParticipants were from the Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study and had or were at high risk of knee OA. Participation restriction was measured using the Instrumental Role Limitation subscale of the Late-Life Disability Index, and affect was measured using the positive affect and depressed mood subscales of the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale. Robust Poisson regression was used to calculate the risk of incident participation restriction over 84 months conferred by combinations of low and high positive and negative affect, adjusting for covariates.ResultsOf 1,810 baseline participants (mean age 62.1 years, 56% female), 470 (26%) had incident participation restriction over 84 months. Participants with low positive affect had 20% greater risk of incident participation restriction than those with high positive affect; participants with high negative affect had 50% greater risk of incident participation restriction compared to those with low negative affect. Participants with both low positive and high negative affect had 80% greater risk of incident participation restriction compared to other combinations of positive and negative affect.ConclusionLow positive and high negative affect, both alone and in combination, increase the risk of participation restriction among adults with knee OA. Efforts aimed at preventing participation restriction in this population should consider these mood states.
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- 2018
11. Comparison of tibiofemoral joint space width measurements from standing CT and fixed flexion radiography
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Segal, Neil A, Frick, Eric, Duryea, Jeffrey, Nevitt, Michael C, Niu, Jingbo, Torner, James C, Felson, David T, and Anderson, Donald D
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Health Sciences ,Sports Science and Exercise ,Clinical Research ,Aging ,Musculoskeletal ,Aged ,Female ,Humans ,Knee Joint ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Posture ,Tomography ,X-Ray Computed ,joint space width ,osteoarthritis ,imaging ,knee ,cartilage loss ,Biomedical Engineering ,Clinical Sciences ,Human Movement and Sports Sciences ,Orthopedics ,Biomedical engineering ,Sports science and exercise - Abstract
The objective of this project was to determine the relationship between medial tibiofemoral joint space width measured on fixed-flexion radiographs and the three-dimensional joint space width distribution on low-dose, standing CT (SCT) imaging. At the 84-month visit of the Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study, 20 participants were recruited. A commercial SCT scanner for the foot and ankle was modified to image knees while standing. Medial tibiofemoral joint space width was assessed on radiographs at fixed locations from 15% to 30% of compartment width using validated software and on SCT by mapping the distances between three-dimensional subchondral bone surfaces. Individual joint space width values from radiographs were compared with three-dimensional joint space width values from corresponding sagittal plane locations using paired t-tests and correlation coefficients. For the four medial-most tibiofemoral locations, radiographic joint space width values exceeded the minimal joint space width on SCT by a mean of 2.0 mm and were approximately equal to the 61st percentile value of the joint space width distribution at each respective sagittal-plane location. Correlation coefficients at these locations were 0.91-0.97 and the offsets between joint space width values from radiographs and SCT measurements were consistent. There were greater offsets and variability in the offsets between modalities closer to the tibial spine. Joint space width measurements on fixed-flexion radiographs are highly correlated with three-dimensional joint space width from SCT. In addition to avoiding bony overlap obscuring the joint, a limitation of radiographs, the current study supports a role for SCT in the evaluation of tibiofemoral OA. © 2017 Orthopaedic Research Society. Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Orthop Res 35:1388-1395, 2017.
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- 2017
12. Perceived Community Environmental Factors and Risk of Five‐Year Participation Restriction Among Older Adults With or at Risk of Knee Osteoarthritis
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Vaughan, Molly W, Felson, David T, LaValley, Michael P, Orsmond, Gael I, Niu, Jingbo, Lewis, Cora E, Segal, Neil A, Nevitt, Michael C, and Keysor, Julie J
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Allied Health and Rehabilitation Science ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Chronic Pain ,Aging ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Arthritis ,Prevention ,Pain Research ,Osteoarthritis ,Management of diseases and conditions ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Musculoskeletal ,Aged ,Environment Design ,Female ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Mobility Limitation ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Perception ,Prospective Studies ,Residence Characteristics ,Risk Factors ,Self Report ,Time Factors ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology ,Clinical sciences ,Allied health and rehabilitation science - Abstract
ObjectiveOlder adults with knee osteoarthritis (OA) who live in environments with mobility barriers may be at greater risk of developing participation restrictions, defined as difficulties in engagement in life situations. We investigated the risk of participation restriction over 5 years due to self-reported environmental features among older adults with knee OA.MethodsParticipants from the Multicenter Osteoarthritis (MOST) Study self-reported participation at baseline, 30 months, and 60 months using the instrumental role subscale of the Late Life Disability Index (LLDI). Data on self-reported environmental features were from the Home and Community Environment questionnaire administered in the MOST Knee Pain and Disability study, an ancillary study of MOST. The relative risks (RRs) of developing participation restriction at 60 months, indicated by an LLDI score
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- 2017
13. The Effect of Widespread Pain on Knee Pain Worsening, Incident Knee Osteoarthritis (OA), and Incident Knee Pain: The Multicenter OA (MOST) Study
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Carlesso, Lisa C, Niu, Jingbo, Segal, Neil A, Frey-Law, Laura A, Lewis, Cora E, Nevitt, Michael C, and Neogi, Tuhina
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Arthritis ,Clinical Research ,Osteoarthritis ,Aging ,Chronic Pain ,Pain Research ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Musculoskeletal ,Aged ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Humans ,Incidence ,Knee Joint ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Pain ,Pain Measurement ,Severity of Illness Index ,WIDESPREAD PAIN ,KNEE PAIN ,OSTEOARTHRITIS ,Immunology ,Public Health and Health Services ,Arthritis & Rheumatology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
ObjectiveWhether widespread pain (WSP) affects the risk of developing knee pain or knee osteoarthritis (OA) is unknown and could enhance understanding of pain mechanisms in OA.MethodsSubjects from the Multicenter OA (MOST) study, a US National Institutes of Health-funded prospective cohort of older adults with or at risk of knee OA, were characterized regarding WSP, defined as pain above and below the waist on both sides of the body and axially using a standard homunculus, excluding knee pain at 60 months (baseline). Followup occurred 2 years later. We assessed the relation of WSP to odds of knee pain worsening (≥ 2-point increase in the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Arthritis Index pain subscale) using logistic regression, and to odds of incident radiographic knee OA (ROA; Kellgren-Lawrence arthritis scale ≥ grade 2 of either knee among those free of ROA at baseline) and incident consistent frequent knee pain (CFKP; knee pain on most days during the past month among participants free of knee pain at baseline) in 1 or both knees using multinomial regression adjusting for potential confounders.ResultsThere were 1752 participants available for analysis [mean age (SD) 67.0 yrs (7.7), body mass index 30.5 kg/m2 (5.9), 59% women]. Baseline presence of WSP was not associated with worsened knee pain (adjusted OR 1.15, 95% CI 0.89-1.48, p = 0.30), ROA (adjusted OR 0.86, 95% CI 0.46-1.63, p = 0.65), or incident CFKP (adjusted OR 1.69, 95% CI 0.96-2.96, p = 0.07).ConclusionWSP was not significantly associated with worsening knee pain, incident ROA, or CFKP. Development of knee pain and ROA does not appear to be influenced by underlying WSP.
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- 2017
14. Brief Report: Partial‐ and Full‐Thickness Focal Cartilage Defects Contribute Equally to Development of New Cartilage Damage in Knee Osteoarthritis: The Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study
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Guermazi, Ali, Hayashi, Daichi, Roemer, Frank W, Niu, Jingbo, Quinn, Emily K, Crema, Michel D, Nevitt, Michael C, Torner, James, Lewis, Cora E, and Felson, David T
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Immunology ,Arthritis ,Osteoarthritis ,Aging ,Clinical Research ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Musculoskeletal ,Aged ,Cartilage ,Articular ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Prospective Studies ,Risk Assessment ,Public Health and Health Services ,Arthritis & Rheumatology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
ObjectiveTo determine the risk of incident cartilage damage at follow-up in subregions that are undamaged at baseline, by comparing tibiofemoral joint compartments with a baseline focal partial-thickness or full-thickness cartilage defect against compartments without any baseline cartilage damage, in knees with and those without radiographic osteoarthritis (OA).MethodsWe included participants in the Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study for whom there were semiquantitative magnetic resonance imaging readings at baseline and at 30 months. We estimated the risk of incident cartilage defects developing in tibiofemoral compartments with prevalent partial-thickness and full-thickness cartilage defects in only one subregion within the compartment, using tibiofemoral compartments with no baseline cartilage defects as a referent. Logistic regression with generalized estimating equations was used for all analyses, with adjustments for confounders.ResultsA total of 374 compartments (359 knees) were included, and 140 knees (39%) had radiographic OA. Compared to compartments with no baseline cartilage defects, those with partial-thickness (adjusted odds ratio 1.62 [95% confidence interval 1.06-2.47]) and full-thickness (adjusted odds ratio 1.92 [95% confidence interval 1.00-3.66]) cartilage defects in a subregion had a higher risk of incident cartilage defects in other subregions in the same compartment.ConclusionPrevalent focal cartilage defects, regardless of defect depth, in a single subregion within a tibiofemoral joint compartment increase the risk of developing new cartilage damage in other subregions of the same compartment for middle-aged to elderly persons with or at high risk of knee OA.
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- 2017
15. Association of Slow Gait Speed With Trajectories of Worsening Depressive Symptoms in Knee Osteoarthritis: An Observational Study
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White, Daniel K, Neogi, Tuhina, Zhang, Yuqing, Niu, Jingbo, and Katz, Patricia P
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Allied Health and Rehabilitation Science ,Health Sciences ,Chronic Pain ,Aging ,Arthritis ,Clinical Research ,Mental Health ,Osteoarthritis ,Pain Research ,Depression ,Aged ,Cohort Studies ,Female ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Risk Factors ,Walking Speed ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology ,Clinical sciences ,Allied health and rehabilitation science - Abstract
ObjectiveTo investigate the association of slow gait speed, defined as walking slower than is necessary for the community, with trajectories of depressive symptoms over 7 years among people with or at high risk of knee OA.MethodsUsing data from the Osteoarthritis Initiative, we described trajectories of depressive symptoms measured annually with the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale. We categorized speed during a 20-meter walk of
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- 2017
16. Multiple Nonspecific Sites of Joint Pain Outside the Knees Develop in Persons With Knee Pain
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Felson, David T, Niu, Jingbo, Quinn, Emily K, Neogi, Tuhina, Lewis, Cara, Lewis, Cora E, Law, Laura Frey, McCulloch, Chuck, Nevitt, Michael, and LaValley, Michael
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Osteoarthritis ,Pain Research ,Arthritis ,Clinical Research ,Chronic Pain ,Aging ,Musculoskeletal ,Aged ,Arthralgia ,Female ,Humans ,Knee Joint ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Immunology ,Public Health and Health Services ,Arthritis & Rheumatology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
ObjectiveMany persons with knee pain have joint pain outside the knee, but despite the impact and high frequency of this pain, its distribution and causes have not been studied. We undertook this study to test the hypothesis of those studying gait abnormalities who have suggested that knee pain causes pain in adjacent joints but that pain adaptation strategies are highly individualized.MethodsWe studied persons ages 50-79 years with or at high risk of knee osteoarthritis who were recruited from 2 community-based cohorts, the Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study and the Osteoarthritis Initiative, and we followed them up for 5-7 years. We excluded those with knee pain at baseline and compared those who had developed knee pain at the first follow-up examination (the index visit) with those who had not. We examined pain on most days at joint regions outside the knee in examinations after the index visit. Logistic regression analyses examined the risk of joint-specific pain adjusted for age, sex, body mass index, and symptoms of depression, and we performed sensitivity analyses excluding those with widespread pain.ResultsIn the combined cohorts, 693 persons had knee pain at the index visit and 2,793 did not. A total of 79.6% of those with bilateral knee pain and 63.8% of those with unilateral knee pain had pain during follow-up in a joint region outside the knee, compared with 49.9% of those without knee pain. There was an increased risk of pain at most extremity joint sites, without a predilection for specific sites. Results were unchanged when those with widespread pain were excluded.ConclusionPersons with chronic knee pain are at increased risk of pain in multiple joints in no specific pattern.
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- 2017
17. The Association of Vibratory Perception and Muscle Strength With the Incidence and Worsening of Knee Instability: The Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study
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Shakoor, Najia, Felson, David T, Niu, Jingbo, Nguyen, Uyen‐Sa, Segal, Neil A, Singh, Jasvinder A, and Nevitt, Michael C
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Chronic Pain ,Pain Research ,Aging ,Arthritis ,Prevention ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Musculoskeletal ,Aged ,Female ,Humans ,Incidence ,Joint Instability ,Male ,Muscle Strength ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Quadriceps Muscle ,Sensation ,Severity of Illness Index ,Vibration ,Immunology ,Public Health and Health Services ,Arthritis & Rheumatology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
ObjectiveTo examine neuromuscular factors that predict the incidence and progression of knee instability symptoms in older adults with or at high risk of knee osteoarthritis (OA).MethodsAt the 60-month clinic visit, participants in the Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study underwent evaluation of quantitative vibratory sense at the knee and isokinetic quadriceps muscle strength. At this 60-month visit, participants were also asked about knee buckling and sensations of knee shifting or slipping without buckling in the past 3 months and then were asked the same questions at the 72- and 84-month follow-up visits. We performed a person-based analysis using Poisson regression analysis with robust error variance to estimate adjusted relative risks (RRs) for the association of vibratory sense and muscle strength with the incidence and worsening of knee slipping/shifting, buckling, and overall knee instability symptoms (either buckling or knee shifting/slipping), with adjustment for relevant confounders.ResultsA total of 1,803 participants (61% women) were included. Approximately one-third of the participants reported incident or worsening of instability symptoms over the study period. After adjustment for relevant confounders, better vibratory acuity (adjusted RR 0.78, 95% confidence interval [95% CI] 0.56-1.09), P = 0.020 for trend) and greater quadriceps strength (adjusted RR 0.53, 95% CI 0.38-0.75, P
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- 2017
18. Effect of Knee Extensor Strength on Incident Radiographic and Symptomatic Knee Osteoarthritis in Individuals With Meniscal Pathology: Data From the Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study
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Thorlund, Jonas B, Felson, David T, Segal, Neil A, Nevitt, Michael C, Niu, Jingbo, Neogi, Tuhina, Lewis, Cora E, Guermazi, Ali, Roemer, Frank, and Englund, Martin
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Allied Health and Rehabilitation Science ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Pain Research ,Chronic Pain ,Clinical Research ,Aging ,Osteoarthritis ,Arthritis ,Prevention ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Musculoskeletal ,Age Factors ,Aged ,Cartilage Diseases ,Female ,Humans ,Knee Joint ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Menisci ,Tibial ,Middle Aged ,Muscle Strength ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Radiography ,Risk Factors ,Sex Factors ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology ,Clinical sciences ,Allied health and rehabilitation science - Abstract
ObjectiveHigh knee extensor strength may be important to protect against the development of knee osteoarthritis (OA) in populations at elevated risk, such as individuals with meniscal pathology. We investigated the extent to which high knee extensor muscle strength was associated with a decreased risk of developing radiographic or symptomatic knee OA in individuals with medial meniscal pathology.MethodsWe studied knees that at the baseline visit of the Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study had medial meniscal pathology but did not have radiographic knee OA (373 knees in 373 participants) or symptomatic knee OA (combination of radiographic knee OA and frequent knee symptoms; 531 knees in 531 participants). Isokinetic knee extensor strength was measured at baseline, and participants were followed for development of incident radiographic knee OA or incident symptomatic knee OA at 84 months. Separate binomial regression analyses with robust SEs adjusted for age, history of knee surgery, physical activity level, and clinic site were conducted for men and women.ResultsHigh knee extensor strength (normalized by allometric scaling) was associated with a reduced risk of radiographic knee OA in women (relative risk [RR] 0.52, 95% confidence interval [95% CI] 0.29-0.94) but not in men (RR 0.56, 95% CI 0.27-1.16). High knee extensor strength did not protect against the development of symptomatic knee OA, either in women or men.ConclusionThe results only partly confirm the hypothesis that high knee extensor muscle strength protects against later development of knee OA in individuals with medial meniscal pathology.
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- 2016
19. Relation of Step Length to Magnetic Resonance Imaging–Detected Structural Damage in the Patellofemoral Joint: The Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study
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Stefanik, Joshua J, Gross, K Douglas, Guermazi, Ali, Felson, David T, Roemer, Frank W, Niu, Jingbo, Lynch, John A, Segal, Neil A, Lewis, Cora E, and Lewis, Cara L
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Pain Research ,Biomedical Imaging ,Aging ,Clinical Research ,Arthritis ,Musculoskeletal ,Aged ,Cohort Studies ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Female ,Gait ,Humans ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Patellofemoral Joint ,Sex Factors ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology - Abstract
ObjectiveTo investigate the relationship of step length to the sex-specific prevalence and worsening of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-detected structural damage in the patellofemoral (PF) joint among a cohort of older women and men with or at risk of knee osteoarthritis (OA).MethodsThe Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study is a cohort study of persons ages 50-79 years with or at risk of knee OA. Step length was assessed using the GAITRite walkway (CIR Systems) at the 60-month visit, and cartilage damage and bone marrow lesions (BMLs) were graded on MRI at the 60- and 84-month visits. Step length was divided into sex-specific quintiles, and the relationship of step length to the prevalence and worsening of cartilage damage and BMLs in the PF joint was examined using logistic regression, adjusting for age, body mass index (BMI), leg length, and tibiofemoral joint structural damage.ResultsIn 1,053 knees, 4,094 and 4,083 PF joint subregions were studied for the cartilage and BML analyses, respectively. Mean ± SD age was 65.6 ± 8.1 years and mean ± SD BMI was 29.1 ± 4.7 kg/m(2) ; 62% of participants were female. In women, compared to those with the shortest step length, those with the longest step length had 0.62 (95% confidence interval [95% CI] 0.43-0.88) and 0.59 (95% CI 0.40-0.87) times the odds of cartilage damage and BMLs, respectively. There was no cross-sectional association in men, and no longitudinal association in either sex.ConclusionWomen with PF joint structural damage may adapt their gait by shortening their step length, but this may not be sufficient to reduce the risk of worsening damage over time.
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- 2016
20. Longitudinal Course of Physical Function in People With Symptomatic Knee Osteoarthritis: Data From the Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study and the Osteoarthritis Initiative
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Øiestad, Britt Elin, White, Daniel K, Booton, Ross, Niu, Jingbo, Zhang, Yuqing, Torner, Jim, Lewis, Cora E, Nevitt, Michael, LaValley, Michael, and Felson, David T
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Arthritis ,Chronic Pain ,Pain Research ,Prevention ,Osteoarthritis ,Aging ,Musculoskeletal ,Aged ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,Disability Evaluation ,Disease Progression ,Exercise Test ,Exercise Tolerance ,Female ,Health Status ,Humans ,Incidence ,Knee Joint ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Prognosis ,Radiography ,Recovery of Function ,Self Report ,Time Factors ,United States ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology ,Clinical sciences ,Allied health and rehabilitation science - Abstract
ObjectivePain and functional decline are hallmarks of knee osteoarthritis (OA). Nevertheless, longitudinal studies unexpectedly reveal stable or improved physical function. The aim of this study was to impute missing and pre-total knee replacement (TKR) values to describe physical function over time among people with symptomatic knee OA.MethodsWe included participants from the Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study (MOST) and the Osteoarthritis Initiative (OAI) with incident symptomatic knee OA, observed during the first 30 months in MOST and 36 months in OAI. Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC) physical function (WOMAC-PF), the 5-times sit-to-stand test, and the 20-meter-walk test were assessed at 4 and 5 years in MOST and at 6 years in OAI. We used a multiple imputation method for missing visits, and estimated pre-TKR values close to the time of TKR, using a fitted local regression smoothing curve. In mixed-effect models, we investigated the physical function change over time, using data before and after imputation and calculation of pre-TKR values.ResultsIn MOST, 225 (8%) had incident knee OA, with corresponding 577 (12.7%) in OAI. After adjusting for pre-TKR values and imputing missing values, we found that WOMAC-PF values remained stable or slightly declined over time, and the 20-meter-walk test results changed from stable in nonimputed analyses to worsening using imputed data.ConclusionData from MOST and OAI showed stable to worsening physical function over time in people with incident symptomatic knee OA after imputing missing values and adjusting pre-TKR values.
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- 2016
21. Association of Joint Inflammation With Pain Sensitization in Knee Osteoarthritis: The Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study
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Neogi, Tuhina, Guermazi, Ali, Roemer, Frank, Nevitt, Michael C, Scholz, Joachim, Arendt-Nielsen, Lars, Woolf, Clifford, Niu, Jingbo, Bradley, Laurence A, Quinn, Emily, and Law, Laura Frey
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Prevention ,Chronic Pain ,Aging ,Arthritis ,Pain Research ,Clinical Research ,Osteoarthritis ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Musculoskeletal ,Aged ,Female ,Humans ,Inflammation ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Pain ,Pain Threshold ,Synovitis ,Clinical Sciences ,Immunology ,Public Health and Health Services ,Arthritis & Rheumatology - Abstract
ObjectivePain sensitization is associated with pain severity in knee osteoarthritis (OA), but its cause in humans is not well understood. We examined whether inflammation, assessed as synovitis and effusion on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), or mechanical load, assessed as bone marrow lesions (BMLs), was associated with sensitization in knee OA.MethodsSubjects in the Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study, a National Institutes of Health-funded cohort of persons with or at risk of knee OA, underwent radiography and MRI of the knee, and standardized quantitative sensory testing (temporal summation and pressure pain threshold [PPT]) of the wrist and patellae at baseline and 2 years later. We examined the relation of synovitis, effusion, and BMLs to temporal summation and PPT cross-sectionally and longitudinally.ResultsThere were 1,111 subjects in the study sample (mean age 67 years, mean body mass index 30 kg/m(2) , 62% female). Synovitis was associated with a significant decrease in PPT at the patella (i.e., more sensitized) over 2 years (adjusted β -0.30 [95% confidence interval (95% CI) -0.52, -0.08]). Effusion was similarly associated with a decrease in PPT at the wrist (adjusted β -0.24 [95% CI -0.41, -0.08]) and with risk of incident temporal summation at the patella (adjusted OR 1.54 [95% CI 1.01, 2.36]). BMLs were not associated with either quantitative sensory testing measure.ConclusionInflammation, as evidenced by synovitis or effusion, is associated with pain sensitization in knee OA. In contrast, BMLs do not appear to contribute to sensitization in knee OA. Early targeting of inflammation is a reasonable strategy to test for prevention of sensitization and through this, reduction of pain severity, in knee OA.
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- 2016
22. Association of hip pain with radiographic evidence of hip osteoarthritis: diagnostic test study.
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Kim, Chan, Nevitt, Michael C, Niu, Jingbo, Clancy, Mary M, Lane, Nancy E, Link, Thomas M, Vlad, Steven, Tolstykh, Irina, Jungmann, Pia M, Felson, David T, and Guermazi, Ali
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Humans ,Arthralgia ,Osteoarthritis ,Hip ,Radiography ,Prevalence ,Risk Factors ,Cohort Studies ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Middle Aged ,United States ,Female ,Male ,United Kingdom ,General & Internal Medicine ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services - Abstract
Study questionIs there concordance between hip pain and radiographic hip osteoarthritis?MethodsIn this diagnostic test study, pelvic radiographs were assessed for hip osteoarthritis in two cohorts: the Framingham Osteoarthritis Study (community of Framingham, Massachusetts) and the Osteoarthritis Initiative (a multicenter longitudinal cohort study of osteoarthritis in the United States). Using visual representation of the hip joint, participants reported whether they had hip pain on most days and the location of the pain: anterior, groin, lateral, buttocks, or low back. In the Framingham study, participants with hip pain were also examined for hip pain with internal rotation. The authors analysed the agreement between radiographic hip osteoarthritis and hip pain, and for those with hip pain suggestive of hip osteoarthritis they calculated the sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value of radiographs as the diagnostic test.Study answer and limitationsIn the Framingham study (n=946), only 15.6% of hips in patients with frequent hip pain showed radiographic evidence of hip osteoarthritis, and 20.7% of hips with radiographic hip osteoarthritis were frequently painful. The sensitivity of radiographic hip osteoarthritis for hip pain localised to the groin was 36.7%, specificity 90.5%, positive predictive value 6.0%, and negative predictive value 98.9%. Results did not differ much for hip pain at other locations or for painful internal rotation. In the Osteoarthritis Initiative study (n=4366), only 9.1% of hips in patients with frequent pain showed radiographic hip osteoarthritis, and 23.8% of hips with radiographic hip osteoarthritis were frequently painful. The sensitivity of definite radiographic hip osteoarthritis for hip pain localised to the groin was 16.5%, specificity 94.0%, positive predictive value 7.1%, and negative predictive value 97.6%. Results also did not differ much for hip pain at other locations.What this study addsHip pain was not present in many hips with radiographic osteoarthritis, and many hips with pain did not show radiographic hip osteoarthritis. Most older participants with a high suspicion for clinical hip osteoarthritis (groin or anterior pain and/or painful internal rotation) did not have radiographic hip osteoarthritis, suggesting that in many cases, hip osteoarthritis might be missed if diagnosticians relied solely on hip radiographs.Funding, competing interests, data sharingSee the full paper on thebmj.com for funding. The authors have no competing interests. Additional data are available from bevochan@bu.edu.
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- 2015
23. Patterns of Coexisting Lesions Detected on Magnetic Resonance Imaging and Relationship to Incident Knee Osteoarthritis: The Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study
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Niu, Jingbo, Felson, David T, Neogi, Tuhina, Nevitt, Michael C, Guermazi, Ali, Roemer, Frank, Lewis, Cora E, Torner, James, and Zhang, Yuqing
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Immunology ,Pain Research ,Aging ,Arthritis ,Osteoarthritis ,Chronic Pain ,Clinical Research ,Biomedical Imaging ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Musculoskeletal ,Aged ,Bone Marrow ,Cartilage ,Articular ,Cohort Studies ,Disease Progression ,Early Diagnosis ,Female ,Humans ,Knee Joint ,Logistic Models ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Male ,Menisci ,Tibial ,Middle Aged ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Patellofemoral Joint ,Prospective Studies ,Radiography ,Synovitis ,Public Health and Health Services ,Arthritis & Rheumatology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
ObjectiveTo identify patterns of coexisting lesions seen on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in knees that are free of radiographic osteoarthritis (OA) and to examine the relationship of these MRI-detected lesions to incident OA.MethodsStudy subjects were individuals enrolled in the Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study, a prospective cohort study. In each subject, 1 knee in which radiographic OA was absent in both the tibiofemoral and patellofemoral joints at baseline was selected for study, with followup for 84 months. We used a novel approach, latent class analysis, to group the constellation of MRI lesions in each joint, i.e., cartilage damage, bone marrow lesion, meniscal tear, meniscal extrusion, synovitis, and effusion, into a manageable number of subgroups. The association of these subgroups with incident radiographic OA in the same joint was assessed using logistic regression.ResultsAmong 885 eligible knees (203 with incident disease in the tibiofemoral joint, 64 with incident disease in the patellofemoral joint), 4 latent subgroups in the tibiofemoral joint were identified (described briefly as minimal lesions, mild lesions, moderate lesions [but limited meniscal lesions], and severe lesions). The odds ratios of incident tibiofemoral joint OA in the latter 3 subgroups (compared to the knees with minimal lesions as the referent) were 5.6, 1.8, and 5.0, respectively. A similar set of 4 subgroups in the patellofemoral joint was identified, except that the fourth subgroup had limited meniscal lesions. The odds ratios of incident disease in the patellofemoral joint were 3.8, 5.1, and 13.7 in the subgroups with mild lesions, moderate lesions, and severe lesions, respectively.ConclusionDifferent patterns of coexisting MRI lesions, which have different implications with regard to risk of knee OA, were identified. Meniscal damage seemed to play a different role in the development of incident disease in tibiofemoral versus patellofemoral joints.
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- 2015
24. The Relationship Between Sex and Incident Knee Osteoarthritis Is Mediated By Shape
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Wise, Barton L, Niu, Jingbo, Zhang, Yuqing, Liu, Felix, Pang, Joyce H, Lynch, John A, and Lane, Nancy E
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- 2015
25. Diagnostic performance of 3D standing CT imaging for detection of knee osteoarthritis features
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Segal, Neil A, Nevitt, Michael C, Lynch, John A, Niu, Jingbo, Torner, James C, and Guermazi, Ali
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Aging ,Clinical Research ,Biomedical Imaging ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,Musculoskeletal ,Aged ,Female ,Femur ,Humans ,Imaging ,Three-Dimensional ,Knee Joint ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Osteophyte ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Tibia ,Tomography ,X-Ray Computed ,Biomechanics ,bone marrow lesions ,cartilage loss ,cone beam computed tomography ,joint loading ,osteoarthritis ,knee ,weight bearing ,Mechanical Engineering ,Human Movement and Sports Sciences ,Sport Sciences - Abstract
ObjectiveTo determine the diagnostic performance of standing computerized tomography (SCT) of the knee for osteophytes and subchondral cysts compared with fixed-flexion radiography, using MRI as the reference standard.MethodsTwenty participants were recruited from the Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study. Participants' knees were imaged with SCT while standing in a knee-positioning frame, and with postero-anterior fixed-flexion radiography and 1T MRI. Medial and lateral marginal osteophytes and subchondral cysts were scored on bilateral radiographs and coronal SCT images using the OARSI grading system and on coronal MRI using Whole Organ MRI Scoring. Imaging modalities were read separately with images in random order. Sensitivity, specificity and accuracy for the detection of lesions were calculated and differences between modalities were tested using McNemar's test.ResultsParticipants' mean age was 66.8 years, body mass index was 29.6 kg/m(2) and 50% were women. Of the 160 surfaces (medial and lateral femur and tibia for 40 knees), MRI revealed 84 osteophytes and 10 subchondral cysts. In comparison with osteophytes and subchondral cysts detected by MRI, SCT was significantly more sensitive (93 and 100%; p < 0.004) and accurate (95 and 99%; p < 0.001 for osteophytes) than plain radiographs (sensitivity 60 and 10% and accuracy 79 and 94%, respectively). For osteophytes, differences in sensitivity and accuracy were greatest at the medial femur (p = 0.002).ConclusionsIn comparison with MRI, SCT imaging was more sensitive and accurate for detection of osteophytes and subchondral cysts than conventional fixed-flexion radiography. Additional study is warranted to assess diagnostic performance of SCT measures of joint space width, progression of OA features and the patellofemoral joint.
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- 2015
26. Sensitivity and sensitisation in relation to pain severity in knee osteoarthritis: trait or state?
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Neogi, Tuhina, Frey-Law, Laura, Scholz, Joachim, Niu, Jingbo, Arendt-Nielsen, Lars, Woolf, Clifford, Nevitt, Michael, Bradley, Laurence, and Felson, David T
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Pain Research ,Aging ,Chronic Pain ,Osteoarthritis ,Clinical Research ,Neurosciences ,Arthritis ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Musculoskeletal ,Aged ,Arthralgia ,Cohort Studies ,Female ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Nociceptive Pain ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Pain Measurement ,Pain Perception ,Pain Threshold ,Postsynaptic Potential Summation ,Severity of Illness Index ,Multicenter Osteoarthritis (MOST) Study ,Epidemiology ,Knee Osteoarthritis ,Immunology ,Public Health and Health Services ,Arthritis & Rheumatology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
ObjectivesIt is not clear whether heightened pain sensitivity in knee osteoarthritis (OA) is related to sensitisation induced by nociceptive input from OA pathology ('state') versus other confounding factors. Conversely, some individuals may be predisposed to sensitisation irrespective of OA ('trait').MethodsThe Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study is a longitudinal cohort of persons with or at risk of knee OA. We obtained knee X-rays, pain questionnaires and comprehensive assessment of factors that can influence pain sensitivity. We examined the relation of sensitisation and sensitivity assessed by mechanical temporal summation (TS) and pressure pain thresholds (PPTs) to knee OA and knee pain severity. To test whether sensitisation and sensitivity is a 'state' induced by OA pathology, we examined the relation of PPT and TS to knee OA duration and severity.ResultsIn 2126 subjects (mean age 68, mean body mass index (BMI) 31, 61% female), PPT and TS were not associated with radiographic OA (ORs 0.9-1.0 for PPT and TS; p>0.05). However, PPT and TS were associated with pain severity (ORs: 1.7-2.0 for PPT; 1.3-1.6 for TS; p
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- 2015
27. Functional Impairment Is a Risk Factor for Knee Replacement in the Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study
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Wise, Barton L, Niu, Jingbo, Felson, David T, Hietpas, Jean, Sadosky, Alesia, Torner, James, Lewis, Cora E, and Nevitt, Michael
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Clinical Sciences ,Orthopedics ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
Background: Debilitating pain associated with knee osteoarthritis (OA) often leads patients to seek and complete total knee arthroplasty (TKA). To date, few studies have evaluated the relation of functional impairment to the risk of TKA, despite the fact that OA is associated with functional impairment. Questions/purposes: The purpose of our study was to (1) evaluate whether function as measured by WOMAC physical function subscale was associated with undergoing TKA; and (2) whether any such association varied by sex. Methods: The National Institutes of Health-funded Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study (MOST) is an observational cohort study of persons aged 50 to 79 years with or at high risk of symptomatic knee OA who were recruited from the community. All eligible subjects with complete data were included in this analysis. Our study population sample consisted of 2946 patients with 5796 knees; 1776 (60%) of patients were women. We performed a repeated-measures analysis using baseline WOMAC physical function score to predict the risk of TKA from baseline to 30 months and WOMAC score at 30 months to predict risk of incident TKA from 30 months to 60 months. We used generalized estimating equations to account for the correlation between two knees within an individual and across the two periods. We calculated relative risk (RR) of TKA over 30 months by WOMAC function using a score of 0 to 5 as the referent in multiple binomial regressions with log link. Results: Those with the greatest functional impairment (WOMAC scores 40–68; 62 TKAs in 462 knee periods) had 15.5 times (95% confidence interval [CI], 7.6–31.8; p
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- 2015
28. Estimation of total mediation effect for high-dimensional omics mediators
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Yang, Tianzhong, Niu, Jingbo, Chen, Han, and Wei, Peng
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- 2021
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29. The Diagnostic Performance of Anterior Knee Pain and Activity-related Pain in Identifying Knees with Structural Damage in the Patellofemoral Joint: The Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study
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Stefanik, Joshua J, Neogi, Tuhina, Niu, Jingbo, Roemer, Frank W, Segal, Neil A, Lewis, Cora E, Nevitt, Michael, Guermazi, Ali, and Felson, David T
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Chronic Pain ,Pain Research ,Clinical Research ,Arthritis ,Aging ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Musculoskeletal ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Arthralgia ,Cohort Studies ,Female ,Humans ,Knee Joint ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Pain Measurement ,Patellofemoral Joint ,Prospective Studies ,Risk Factors ,Self Report ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Severity of Illness Index ,OSTEOARTHRITIS ,PAIN ,MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING ,Clinical Sciences ,Immunology ,Public Health and Health Services ,Arthritis & Rheumatology - Abstract
ObjectiveTo determine the diagnostic test performance of location of pain and activity-related pain in identifying knees with patellofemoral joint (PFJ) structural damage.MethodsThe Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study is a US National Institutes of Health-funded cohort study of older adults with or at risk of knee osteoarthritis. Subjects identified painful areas around the knee on a knee pain map and the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index was used to assess pain with stairs and walking on level ground. Cartilage damage and bone marrow lesions were assessed from knee magnetic resonance imaging. We determined the sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values for presence of anterior knee pain (AKP), pain with stairs, absence of pain while walking on level ground, and combinations of tests in discriminating knees with isolated PFJ structural damage from those with isolated tibiofemoral joint (TFJ) or no structural damage. Knees with mixed PFJ/TFJ damage were removed from our analyses because of the inability to determine which compartment was causing pain.ResultsThere were 407 knees that met our inclusion criteria. "Any" AKP had a sensitivity of 60% and specificity of 53%; and if AKP was the only area of pain, the sensitivity dropped to 27% but specificity rose to 81%. Absence of moderate pain with walking on level ground had the greatest sensitivity (93%) but poor specificity (13%). The combination of "isolated" AKP and moderate pain with stairs had poor sensitivity (9%) but the greatest specificity (97%) of strategies tested.ConclusionCommonly used questions purported to identify knees with PFJ structural damage do not identify this condition with great accuracy.
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- 2014
30. Synovitis in Knee Osteoarthritis Assessed by Contrast-enhanced Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) is Associated with Radiographic Tibiofemoral Osteoarthritis and MRI-detected Widespread Cartilage Damage: The MOST Study
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Guermazi, Ali, Hayashi, Daichi, Roemer, Frank W, Zhu, Yanyan, Niu, Jingbo, Crema, Michel D, Javaid, M Kassim, Marra, Monica D, Lynch, John A, El-Khoury, George Y, Zhang, Yuqing, Nevitt, Michael C, and Felson, David T
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Chronic Pain ,Clinical Research ,Pain Research ,Biomedical Imaging ,Arthritis ,Aging ,Osteoarthritis ,Musculoskeletal ,Aged ,Cartilage ,Articular ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Female ,Humans ,Knee Joint ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Synovitis ,SYNOVITIS ,OSTEOARTHRITIS ,CARTILAGE ,MENISCUS ,MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING ,Clinical Sciences ,Immunology ,Public Health and Health Services ,Arthritis & Rheumatology - Abstract
ObjectiveTo examine the cross-sectional association of whole-knee synovitis assessed by contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (CEMRI) with radiographic tibiofemoral osteoarthritis (OA), non-CEMRI-assessed cartilage damage, and meniscal status.MethodsMulticenter Osteoarthritis Study (MOST) is a cohort study of people with or at high risk of knee OA. Subjects are a subset of MOST who volunteered for both CEMRI and non-CEMRI. Using CEMRI, synovitis was assessed at 11 sites and graded 0-2 at each site. Presence of "whole-knee synovitis" was defined as the synovitis score of ≥ 1 at any site from each knee. Cartilage and meniscal damage was evaluated using non-CEMRI based on the Whole Organ MRI Score. Logistic regression was used to assess associations of synovitis with radiographic OA (Kellgren-Lawrence grade ≥ 2), widespread cartilage damage, and meniscal damage, adjusting for age, sex, and body mass index (BMI). Additional analyses were performed excluding subjects who had chondrocalcinosis on radiography and those taking antiinflammatory medications.ResultsFour hundred four subjects were included (mean age 58.8 ± 7.0 yrs, BMI 29.6 ± 4.9 kg/m(2), 45.5% women). On CEMRI, the maximum synovitis score across 11 sites in each knee was 0 in 106 knees (26.2%), 1 in 135 (33.4%), and 2 in 163 (40.4%). Synovitis was associated with radiographic OA [adjusted OR (aOR) 3.25, 95% CI 1.98-5.35] and widespread cartilage damage (aOR 1.91, 95% CI 1.24-2.92). Severe meniscal damage showed a borderline significant association with synovitis (aOR 1.74, 95% CI 0.99-3.04). Additional analyses as described did not notably change the results.ConclusionCEMRI-detected synovitis is strongly associated with tibiofemoral radiographic OA and MRI-detected widespread cartilage damage.
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- 2014
31. Does Clinically Important Change in Function After Knee Replacement Guarantee Good Absolute Function? The Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study
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Maxwell, Jessica L, Felson, David T, Niu, Jingbo, Wise, Barton, Nevitt, Michael C, Singh, Jasvinder A, Frey-Law, Laura, and Neogi, Tuhina
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Rehabilitation ,Clinical Research ,Arthritis ,Prevention ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Musculoskeletal ,Aged ,Arthroplasty ,Replacement ,Knee ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Pain Measurement ,Patient Satisfaction ,Recovery of Function ,Severity of Illness Index ,Treatment Outcome ,KNEE REPLACEMENT ,PHYSICAL FUNCTION ,OUTCOMES ,Immunology ,Public Health and Health Services ,Arthritis & Rheumatology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
ObjectivePoor functional outcomes post-knee replacement are common, but estimates of its prevalence vary, likely in part because of differences in methods used to assess function. The agreement between improvement in function and absolute good levels of function after knee replacement has not been evaluated. We evaluated the attainment of improvement in function and absolute good function after total knee replacement (TKR) and the agreement between these measures.MethodsUsing data from The Multicenter Osteoarthritis (MOST) Study, we determined the prevalence of achieving a minimal clinically important improvement (MCII, ≥ 14.2/68 point improvement) and Patient Acceptable Symptom State (PASS, ≤ 22/68 post-TKR score) on the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC) Physical Function subscale at least 6 months after knee replacement. We also assessed the frequency of co-occurrence of the 2 outcomes, and the prevalence according to pre-knee replacement functional status.ResultsWe included 228 subjects who had a knee replacement during followup (mean age 65 yrs, mean body mass index 33.4, 73% female). Seventy-one percent attained the PASS for function after knee replacement, while only 44% attained the MCII. Of the subjects who met the MCII, 93% also attained the PASS; however, of subjects who did not meet the MCII, 54% still achieved a PASS. Baseline functional status was associated with attainment of each MCII and PASS.ConclusionThere was only partial overlap between attainment of a good level of function and actually improving by an acceptable amount. Subjects were more likely to attain an acceptable level of function than to achieve a clinically important amount of improvement post-knee replacement.
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- 2014
32. Oral Anticoagulation in Patients With End-Stage Kidney Disease on Dialysis and Atrial Fibrillation
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Hu, Austin, Niu, Jingbo, and Winkelmayer, Wolfgang C.
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- 2018
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33. Participation following knee replacement: the MOST cohort study.
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Maxwell, Jessica L, Keysor, Julie J, Niu, Jingbo, Singh, Jasvinder A, Wise, Barton L, Frey-Law, Laura, Nevitt, Michael C, and Felson, David T
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Knee Joint ,Humans ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Pain ,Pain Measurement ,Arthroplasty ,Replacement ,Knee ,Longitudinal Studies ,Depression ,Age Factors ,Recovery of Function ,Aged ,Middle Aged ,Female ,Male ,Social Participation ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,White People ,Aging ,Pain Research ,Chronic Pain ,Clinical Research ,Musculoskeletal ,Whites ,Clinical Sciences ,Human Movement and Sports Sciences ,Rehabilitation - Abstract
BackgroundParticipation is an important, yet seldom studied, outcome after total knee replacement (TKR).ObjectiveThe purpose of this study was to investigate the extent and predictors of participation and participation restriction among people after TKR.Materials and methodsThis study investigated the changes in pain, function, and participation scores (measured using a subscale of the Late-Life Function and Disability Instrument) from pre-TKR to ≥1 year post-TKR among a subsample of participants from the Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study (MOST) longitudinal cohort (MOST is funded by the National Institutes of Health). The proportions of individuals with participation restriction pre-TKR and ≥1 and ≥2 years post-TKR were calculated for all participants and for important demographic subgroups. The association between demographic and clinical factors and participation was estimated using linear regression. The association between demographic and clinical factors and participation restriction was estimated using logistic regression.ResultsThere were 292 individuals with outcome data ≥1 year post-TKR. Of these, 218 (75%) had data pre-TKR and ≥1 year post-TKR and 160 (55%) had data ≥2 years post-TKR. There were mean improvements in pain, function, and participation at ≥1 and 2 years. However, approximately 30% of the study sample had participation restriction pre-TKR and post-TKR, and the proportion decreased significantly only for those
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- 2013
34. Medial Posterior Meniscal Root Tears Are Associated with Development or Worsening of Medial Tibiofemoral Cartilage Damage: The Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study
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Guermazi, Ali, Hayashi, Daichi, Jarraya, Mohamed, Roemer, Frank W, Zhang, Yuqing, Niu, Jingbo, Crema, Michel D, Englund, Martin, Lynch, John A, Nevitt, Michael C, Torner, James C, Lewis, Cora E, and Felson, David T
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Aging ,Clinical Research ,Arthritis ,Musculoskeletal ,Aged ,Causality ,Comorbidity ,Female ,Fractures ,Cartilage ,Humans ,Knee Injuries ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Male ,Menisci ,Tibial ,Middle Aged ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Prevalence ,Risk Factors ,Tibial Meniscus Injuries ,United States ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging - Abstract
PurposeTo assess the association of meniscal root tear with the development or worsening of tibiofemoral cartilage damage.Materials and methodsInstitutional review board approval and written informed consent from all subjects were obtained. A total of 596 knees with radiographically depicted osteoarthritis were randomly selected from the Multicenter Osteoarthritis study cohort. Cartilage damage was semiquantitatively assessed by using the Whole-Organ Magnetic Resonance Imaging Score (WORMS) system (grades 0-6). Subjects were separated into three groups: root tear only, meniscal tear without root tear, and neither meniscal nor root tear. A log-binomial regression model was used to calculate the relative risks for knees to develop incident or progressing cartilage damage in the root tear group and the meniscal tear group, with the no tear group serving as a reference.ResultsIn the medial tibiofemoral joint, there were 37 knees with isolated medial posterior root tear, 294 with meniscal tear without root tear, and 264 without meniscal or root tear. There were only two lateral posterior root tears, and no anterior root tears were found. Thus, the focus was on the medial posterior root tear. The frequency of severe cartilage damage (WORMS ≥ 5) was higher in the group with root tear than in the group without root or meniscal tear (76.7% vs 19.7%, P < .0001) but not in the group with meniscal but no root tear (76.7% vs 65.2%, P = .055). Longitudinal analyses included 33 knees with isolated medial posterior root tear, 270 with meniscal tear, and 245 with no tear. Adjusted relative risk of cartilage loss was 2.03 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.18, 3.48) for the root tear group and 1.84 (95% CI: 1.32, 2.58) for the meniscal tear group.ConclusionIsolated medial posterior meniscal root tear is associated with incident and progressive medial tibiofemoral cartilage loss.
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- 2013
35. The Influence of the Contralateral Knee Prior to Knee Arthroplasty on Post-Arthroplasty Function
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Maxwell, Jessica, Niu, Jingbo, Singh, Jasvinder A, Nevitt, Michael C, Law, Laura Frey, and Felson, David
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Rehabilitation ,Arthritis ,Aging ,Clinical Research ,Chronic Pain ,Pain Research ,Musculoskeletal ,Aged ,Arthroplasty ,Replacement ,Knee ,Female ,Humans ,Knee Joint ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Pain ,Pain Measurement ,Prognosis ,Recovery of Function ,Risk Assessment ,Treatment Outcome ,Biomedical Engineering ,Clinical Sciences ,Orthopedics - Abstract
BackgroundSome of the poor functional outcomes of knee arthroplasty may be due to pain in the contralateral, unreplaced knee. We investigated the relationship between the preoperative pain status of the contralateral knee and the risk of a poor postoperative functional outcome in patients who underwent knee arthroplasty.MethodsWe analyzed data on 271 patients in the Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study who had undergone knee arthroplasty since the time of enrollment. Eighty-six percent of these patients were white, 72% were female, and the mean age was sixty-seven years. The severity of pain in the knee contralateral to the one that was replaced was measured before the knee arthroplasty with use of the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC) pain scale, with the scores being grouped into four categories (0, 1 to 4, 5 to 9, and 10 to 20). Poor post-arthroplasty function six months or more after surgery was determined with use of the Patient Acceptable Symptom State (PASS) outcome tool and a clinical performance measure of walking speed. We evaluated the relationship between contralateral pain severity and the functional outcomes with use of Poisson regression.ResultsSeventy-two (27%) of 264 patients demonstrated poor post-arthroplasty function by failing to attain the threshold PASS score, and seventy-six (30%) of 250 subjects had a slow walking speed. As the pre-arthroplasty pain in the contralateral knee increased, there was a steady increase in the proportion with poor post-arthroplasty function (p < 0.0001 for PASS and p = 0.04 for slow walking speed). Compared with patients who had no pre-arthroplasty pain in the contralateral knee, those in the highest category of contralateral pain severity had 4.1 times the risk (95% confidence interval, 1.5 to 11.5) of having poor self-reported post-arthroplasty function. Patients in whom both knees had been replaced at the time of outcome collection were less likely to have poor self-reported function than those in whom only one knee had been replaced.ConclusionsPreoperative pain in the contralateral knee is strongly associated with self-reported post-arthroplasty functional outcome and may therefore be a useful indicator of prognosis or a potential target of perioperative intervention.Level of evidencePrognostic Level II. See Instructions for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.
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- 2013
36. Progression of osteoarthritis as a state of inertia
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Felson, David, Niu, Jingbo, Sack, Burton, Aliabadi, Piran, McCullough, Charles, and Nevitt, Michael C
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Aging ,Prevention ,Arthritis ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Cohort Studies ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Humans ,Logistic Models ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Prognosis ,Radiography ,Time Factors ,Immunology ,Public Health and Health Services ,Arthritis & Rheumatology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
ObjectivesTo test whether knees which recently developed disease were at higher risk for subsequent x-ray progression than knees which had been stable, suggesting that recent change produces further change and recent stability yields subsequent stability (a pattern of inertia).MethodsWe used central readings of the annual posteroanterior x-rays obtained in the Osteoarthritis Initiative (OAI) focusing on change in Kellgren and Lawrence (KL) grade and change in semiquantitative joint space. We examined whether knees that had developed incident disease (KL grade 2) were at higher risk of subsequent progression than knees that were already grade 2 and had had stable disease. We combined data from multiple examinations. Using generalised estimating equations to adjust for the correlation between knees, we carried out logistic regression evaluating the risk for disease progression testing incident versus stable disease adjusting for age, sex, body mass index, physical activity, quadriceps strength and mechanical alignment.Results1562 OAI subjects with grade 2 disease had a mean age of 61.8 years, mean BMI of 29.4, and 61.7% were women. Of knees with stable disease, 4.1% showed progression within the next 12 months in KL grade versus 13.7% in those with incident disease (adjusted OR 4.0; 95% CI 2.4 to 6.7). For progression of joint space loss, we found a similar relation with incident versus stable disease (adjusted OR 5.3; 95% CI 3.6 to 7.9).ConclusionsKnee osteoarthritis radiographic progression follows a pattern of inertia. Factors that trigger the transition from stable disease to progression should be sought.
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- 2013
37. The association between meniscal damage of the posterior horns and localized posterior synovitis detected on T1-weighted contrast-enhanced MRI—The MOST study
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Roemer, Frank W, Felson, David T, Yang, Tianzhong, Niu, Jingbo, Crema, Michel D, Englund, Martin, Nevitt, Michael C, Zhang, Yuqing, Lynch, John A, Khoury, George Y El, Torner, James, Lewis, Cora E, and Guermazi, Ali
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Arthritis ,Pain Research ,Biomedical Imaging ,Musculoskeletal ,Aged ,Female ,Humans ,Knee Joint ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Male ,Menisci ,Tibial ,Middle Aged ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Posterior Cruciate Ligament ,Synovitis ,Osteoarthritis ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Meniscal damage ,Public Health and Health Services ,Arthritis & Rheumatology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
ObjectiveSynovitis is thought to be a secondary phenomenon in the osteoarthritis (OA) process and the menisci might be triggers of localized synovitis. The aim was to assess the cross-sectional associations of posterior horn meniscal damage with perimeniscal synovitis, and with synovitis posterior to the posterior cruciate ligament (PCL) using contrast enhanced (CE) MRI.DesignThe Multicenter Osteoarthritis (MOST) Study is a longitudinal observational study of subjects with or at risk for knee OA. Subjects are a subset of MOST who were examined with 1.5T CE MRI and had semiquantitative synovitis (scored from 0 to 2 at 11 locations) and meniscal readings (scored with WORMS from 0 to 4) available. Logistic regression was used to assess the association of posterior meniscal damage and perimeniscal synovitis in the same compartment, and between posterior meniscal damage and synovitis posterior to the PCL.ResultsThree hundred and seventy seven knees were included (mean age 61.1 years±6.9, mean BMI 29.6±4.9, 44.3% women). The odds for ipsi-compartmental perimeniscal synovitis were increased for knees with medial posterior horn meniscal damage (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 2.5, 95% confidence intervals [95% CI] 1.3,4.8), but not for lateral damage (aOR 1.7, 95% CI 0.4,6.6). No positive associations were found for meniscal damage and presence of synovitis posterior to the PCL (aOR 0.9, 95% CI 0.6,1.5).ConclusionsMeniscal damage of the posterior horns is associated with ipsi-compartmental perimensical synovitis. No associations were found for posterior horn meniscal damage with synovitis posterior to the PCL, which suggests that synovitis posterior to the PCL is likely to be triggered by different pathomechanisms.
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- 2013
38. Walking to Meet Physical Activity Guidelines in Knee Osteoarthritis: Is 10,000 Steps Enough?
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White, Daniel K, Tudor-Locke, Catrine, Felson, David T, Gross, K Doug, Niu, Jingbo, Nevitt, Michael, Lewis, Cora E, Torner, James, and Neogi, Tuhina
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Services and Systems ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Prevention ,Aging ,Pain Research ,Arthritis ,Clinical Research ,Osteoarthritis ,Musculoskeletal ,Aged ,Cohort Studies ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Monitoring ,Ambulatory ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Patient Compliance ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Walking ,Human Movement and Sports Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Rehabilitation ,Clinical sciences ,Allied health and rehabilitation science ,Sports science and exercise - Abstract
ObjectiveTo study if step goals (eg, walking 10,000 steps a day) approximate meeting the 2008 Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans.DesignCross-sectional observational cohort.SettingCommunity.ParticipantsPeople with or at high risk of knee OA (N=1788).InterventionsNone.Main outcome measuresObjective physical activity data were collected over 7 consecutive days from people with or at high risk of knee OA participating in the Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study. Using activity monitor data, we determined the proportion that (1) walked ≥10,000 steps per day, (2) met the 2008 Physical Activity Guidelines, and (3) achieved both recommendations.ResultsOf the subjects studied (mean age ± SD, 67±8y; mean body mass index ± SD, 31±6kg/m(2); 60% women), 16.7% of men and 12.6% of women walked ≥10,000 steps per day, while 6% of men and 5% of women met the 2008 Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans. Of those walking ≥10,000 steps per day, 16.7% and 26.7% of men and women, respectively, also met the 2008 Physical Activity Guidelines.ConclusionsAmong this sample of older adults with or at high risk of knee OA, walking ≥10,000 steps a day did not translate into meeting public health guidelines. These findings highlight the disparity between the number of steps believed to be needed per day and the recommended time-intensity guidelines to achieve positive health benefits.
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- 2013
39. Valgus malalignment is a risk factor for lateral knee osteoarthritis incidence and progression: Findings from the multicenter osteoarthritis study and the osteoarthritis initiative
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Felson, David T, Niu, Jingbo, Gross, K Douglas, Englund, Martin, Sharma, Leena, Cooke, T Derek V, Guermazi, Ali, Roemer, Frank W, Segal, Neil, Goggins, Joyce M, Lewis, C Elizabeth, Eaton, Charles, and Nevitt, Michael C
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Engineering ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Biomedical Engineering ,Clinical Research ,Aging ,Chronic Pain ,Arthritis ,Pain Research ,Osteoarthritis ,Musculoskeletal ,Aged ,Bone Malalignment ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Health Surveys ,Humans ,Incidence ,Knee Joint ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Radiography ,Risk Factors ,Immunology ,Public Health and Health Services ,Arthritis & Rheumatology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
ObjectiveTo study the effect of valgus malalignment on knee osteoarthritis (OA) incidence and progression.MethodsWe measured the mechanical axis from long limb radiographs from the Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study (MOST) and the Osteoarthritis Initiative (OAI) to define limbs with valgus malalignment (mechanical axis of ≥1.1° valgus) and examined the effect of valgus alignment versus neutral alignment (neither varus nor valgus) on OA structural outcomes. Posteroanterior radiographs and knee magnetic resonance (MR) images were obtained at the time of the long limb radiograph and at followup examinations. Lateral progression was defined as an increase in joint space narrowing (on a semiquantitative scale) in knees with OA, and incidence was defined as new lateral narrowing in knees without radiographic OA. We defined lateral cartilage damage and progressive meniscal damage as increases in cartilage or meniscus scores at followup on the Whole-Organ Magnetic Resonance Imaging Score scale (for the MOST) or the Boston Leeds Osteoarthritis Knee Score scale (for the OAI). We used logistic regression with adjustment for age, sex, body mass index, and Kellgren/Lawrence grade, as well as generalized estimating equations, to evaluate the effect of valgus alignment versus neutral alignment on disease outcomes. We calculated odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs).ResultsWe studied 5,053 knees (881 valgus) of subjects in the MOST cohort and 5,953 knees (1,358 valgus) of subjects in the OAI cohort. In both studies, all strata of valgus malalignment, including 1.1° to 3° valgus, were associated with an increased risk of lateral disease progression. In knees without radiographic OA, valgus alignment >3° was associated with incidence (e.g., in the MOST, adjusted OR 2.5 [95% CI 1.0-5.9]). Valgus alignment >3° was also associated with cartilage damage on MR imaging in knees without OA (e.g., in the OAI, adjusted OR 5.9 [95% CI 1.1-30.3]).We found a strong relationship of valgus malalignment with progressive lateral meniscal damage.ConclusionValgus malalignment increases the risk of knee OA radiographic progression and incidence as well as the risk of lateral cartilage damage. It may cause these effects, in part, by increasing the risk of meniscal damage.
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- 2013
40. Do radiographic disease and pain account for why people with or at high risk of knee osteoarthritis do not meet physical activity guidelines?
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White, Daniel K, Tudor‐Locke, Catrine, Felson, David T, Gross, K Douglas, Niu, Jingbo, Nevitt, Michael, Lewis, Cora E, Torner, James, and Neogi, Tuhina
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Clinical Research ,Pain Research ,Chronic Pain ,Aging ,Osteoarthritis ,Prevention ,Arthritis ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Musculoskeletal ,Adult ,Aged ,Cohort Studies ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Humans ,Knee Joint ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Motor Activity ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Pain ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Radiography ,Risk Factors ,Severity of Illness Index ,Walking ,Clinical Sciences ,Immunology ,Public Health and Health Services ,Arthritis & Rheumatology - Abstract
ObjectiveKnee osteoarthritis (OA) and pain are assumed to be barriers to meeting physical activity guidelines, but this has not been formally evaluated. The purpose of this study was to determine the proportions of people with and those without knee OA and knee pain who meet recommended physical activity levels through walking.MethodsWe performed a cross-sectional analysis of community-dwelling adults from the Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study who had or who were at high risk of knee OA. Participants wore a StepWatch activity monitor to record steps per day for 7 days. The proportion of participants who met the recommended physical activity levels was defined as those accumulating≥150 minutes per week at ≥100 steps per minute in bouts lasting ≥10 minutes. These proportions were also determined for those with and those without knee OA, as classified by radiography and by severity of knee pain.ResultsOf the 1,788 study participants (mean±SD age 67.2±7.7 years, mean±SD body mass index 30.7±6.0 kg/m2, 60% women), lower overall percentages of participants with radiographic knee OA and knee pain met recommended physical activity levels. However, these differences were not statistically significant between those with and those without knee OA; 7.3% and 10.1% of men (P=0.34) and 6.3% and 7.8% of women (P=0.51), respectively, met recommended physical activity levels. Similarly, for those with moderate/severe knee pain and those with no knee pain, 12.9% and 10.9% of men (P=0.74) and 6.7% and 11.0% of women (P=0.40), respectively, met recommended physical activity levels.ConclusionDisease and pain have little impact on achieving recommended physical activity levels among people with or at high risk of knee OA.
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- 2013
41. Meniscal body extrusion and cartilage coverage in middle-aged and elderly without radiographic knee osteoarthritis
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Svensson, Fredrik, Felson, David T, Zhang, Fan, Guermazi, Ali, Roemer, Frank W, Niu, Jingbo, Aliabadi, Piran, Neogi, Tuhina, and Englund, Martin
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- 2019
- Full Text
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42. When it hurts, a positive attitude may help: association of positive affect with daily walking in knee osteoarthritis. Results from a multicenter longitudinal cohort study
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White, Daniel K, Keysor, Julie J, Neogi, Tuhina, Felson, David T, LaValley, Michael, Gross, K Doug, Niu, Jingbo, Nevitt, Michael, Lewis, Cora E, Torner, Jim, and Fredman, Lisa
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Clinical Research ,Pain Research ,Chronic Pain ,Depression ,Aging ,Osteoarthritis ,Arthritis ,Mental Health ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Musculoskeletal ,Actigraphy ,Affect ,Aged ,Alabama ,Arthralgia ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Female ,Health Knowledge ,Attitudes ,Practice ,Humans ,Iowa ,Knee Joint ,Linear Models ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Multivariate Analysis ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Pain Measurement ,Radiography ,Risk Assessment ,Risk Factors ,Walking ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology - Abstract
ObjectiveWhile depressive symptoms and knee pain are independently known to impede daily walking in older adults, it is unknown whether positive affect promotes daily walking. This study investigated this association among adults with knee osteoarthritis (OA) and examined whether knee pain modified this association.MethodsThis study is a cross-sectional analysis of the Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study. We included 1,018 participants (mean ± SD age 63.1 ± 7.8 years, 60% women) who had radiographic knee OA and had worn a StepWatch monitor to record their number of steps per day. High and low positive affect and depressive symptoms were based on the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale. Knee pain was categorized as present in respondents who reported pain on most days at both a clinic visit and a telephone screening.ResultsCompared to respondents with low positive affect (27% of all respondents), those with high positive affect (63%) walked a similar number of steps per day, while those with depressive symptoms (10%) walked less (adjusted β -32.6 [95% confidence interval (95% CI) -458.9, 393.8] and -579.1 [95% CI -1,274.9, 116.7], respectively). There was a statistically significant interaction of positive affect by knee pain (P = 0.0045). Among the respondents with knee pain (39%), those with high positive affect walked significantly more steps per day (adjusted β 711.0 [95% CI 55.1, 1,366.9]) than those with low positive affect.ConclusionHigh positive affect was associated with more daily walking among adults with painful knee OA. Positive affect may be an important psychological factor to consider for promoting physical activity among people with painful knee OA.
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- 2012
43. Patterns of compartment involvement in tibiofemoral osteoarthritis in men and women and in whites and African Americans
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Wise, Barton L, Niu, Jingbo, Yang, Mei, Lane, Nancy E, Harvey, William, Felson, David T, Hietpas, Jean, Nevitt, Michael, Sharma, Leena, Torner, Jim, Lewis, CE, Zhang, Yuqing, and Group, Multicenter Osteoarthritis
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Epidemiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Aging ,Arthritis ,Musculoskeletal ,Black or African American ,Aged ,Bone Malalignment ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Femur ,Humans ,Knee Joint ,Logistic Models ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Osteoarthritis ,Knee ,Prevalence ,Radiography ,Sex Characteristics ,Tibia ,White People ,Multicenter Osteoarthritis (MOST) Group ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology ,Clinical sciences ,Allied health and rehabilitation science - Abstract
ObjectiveWe conducted a cross-sectional study to describe the prevalence of tibiofemoral joint space narrowing (JSN) in medial and lateral compartments and assess whether it differs by sex and ethnic groups, and, if it does, to what extent such a difference is accounted for by knee malalignment.MethodsThe Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study is an observational study of persons ages 50-79 years with either symptomatic knee osteoarthritis or high risk of disease. Knee radiographs were assessed for JSN in each tibiofemoral compartment. Mechanical axis angle was measured using full-extremity films. We compared the proportion of knees with medial compartment JSN and with lateral JSN between men and women, as well as between whites and African Americans, using a logistic regression model adjusting for covariates (race or sex and body mass index, age, education, and clinic site). We used generalized estimating equations to account for correlation between 2 knees within a person.ResultsOf 5,202 knees (2,652 subjects), 1,532 (29.5%) had medial JSN and 427 (8.2%) had lateral JSN. Lateral JSN was more prevalent in the knees of women than in men (odds ratio [OR] 1.9, 95% confidence interval [95% CI] 1.5-2.4) and was also higher in the knees of African Americans than in whites (OR 2.4, 95% CI 1.7-3.3). Further adjustment for malalignment attenuated the OR for sex but not the OR for race.ConclusionWomen and African Americans are more likely to have lateral JSN than men and whites, respectively. Valgus malalignment may contribute to the higher prevalence in women.
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- 2012
44. Hydroxychloroquine Dose and Risk for Incident Retinopathy
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Melles, Ronald B., primary, Jorge, April M., additional, Marmor, Michael F., additional, Zhou, Baijun, additional, Conell, Carol, additional, Niu, Jingbo, additional, McCormick, Natalie, additional, Zhang, Yuqing, additional, and Choi, Hyon K., additional
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- 2023
- Full Text
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45. Multi-dimensional reliability assessment of fractal signature analysis in an outpatient sports medicine population
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Jarraya, Mohamed, Guermazi, Ali, Niu, Jingbo, Duryea, Jeffrey, Lynch, John A., and Roemer, Frank W.
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- 2015
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46. Reliability of MRI assessment of acute musculotendinous groin injuries in athletes
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Serner, Andreas, Roemer, Frank W., Hölmich, Per, Thorborg, Kristian, Niu, Jingbo, Weir, Adam, Tol, Johannes L., and Guermazi, Ali
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- 2017
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47. A Comparison of US Medicare Expenditures for Hemodialysis and Peritoneal Dialysis
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Kaplan, Jennifer M., primary, Niu, Jingbo, additional, Ho, Vivian, additional, Winkelmayer, Wolfgang C., additional, and Erickson, Kevin F., additional
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- 2022
- Full Text
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48. MR arthrography of the shoulder: Optimizing pulse sequence protocols for the evaluation of cartilage and labrum
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Guermazi, Ali, Jomaah, Nabil, Hayashi, Daichi, Jarraya, Mohamed, Silva, Jose Roberto, Jr., Niu, Jingbo, Almusa, Emad, Landreau, Philippe, and Roemer, Frank W.
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- 2014
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49. Anterior Cruciate Ligament OsteoArthritis Score (ACLOAS): Longitudinal MRI-based whole joint assessment of anterior cruciate ligament injury
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Roemer, Frank W., Frobell, Richard, Lohmander, L. Stefan, Niu, Jingbo, and Guermazi, Ali
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- 2014
- Full Text
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50. Alcohol Quantity and Type on Risk of Recurrent Gout Attacks: An Internet-based Case-crossover Study
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Neogi, Tuhina, Chen, Clara, Niu, Jingbo, Chaisson, Christine, Hunter, David J., and Zhang, Yuqing
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- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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