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Tuesday,
January 28, 2003
Glucosamine offers relief from knee pain
Glucosamine supplements reduce knee pain in people with cartilage
damage and possibly the degenerative joint disease osteoarthritis,
concludes research in this month’s British Journal of Sports
Medicine.
- 2003/01/28
Glucosamine is produced naturally in the body and found primarily
in joint cartilage, damage to which often precedes osteoarthritis.
Glucosamine supplements are widely available from health food
shops, supermarkets, and over the internet. The researchers from
the University of Western Australia conducted a small trial in
which 24 patients with chronic knee pain were prescribed 2000mg
a day of glucosamine and a further 22 patients were given placebo.
The patients were all aged between 20 and 70 and regularly suffered
knee pain that was severe enough to curtail routine activities.
The trial lasted 12 weeks, during which time knee pain and mobility
were assessed at regular intervals. Mobility improved over time
in both groups of patients, but this happened more quickly in
the patients treated with glucosamine, starting at four to eight
weeks of the study. By week 12, almost nine out of ten (88 per
cent) of those given glucosamine said their knee pain had lessened
compared with only three (17 per cent) in the group treated with
the placebo. The authors conclude that 2000 mg of glucosamine
daily can provide some degree of pain relief and improved mobility
in patients with chronic knee pain as a result of previous cartilage
damage or possibly osteoarthritis.
SOURCE: British Journal of Sports Medicine 2003;37:45-49 |