The Lancet, ISSN: 0140-6736, Vol: 357, Issue: 9268, Page: 1617

Glucosamine sulphate and osteoarthritis

Payne, R B
Knee
Jean Yves Reginster and colleagues

show that long-term oral glucosamine sulphate improved symptoms in older non-obese patients who had primary knee osteoarthritis without inflammation.

The mainstay of non-pharmacological therapy for osteoarthritis of the knee is exercise.

Pain and disability are reduced by aerobic exercise and by exercise that strengthens the muscles around the joint.

Although not explicitly stated by Reginster and colleagues, it seems unlikely that the control and trial patients in their study took different amounts of exercise. There is, therefore, a case for investigation of whether the beneficial effects of exercise and oral glucosamine differ and whether they are additive.


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