Journal•ISSN: 1063-4584
Osteoarthritis and Cartilage
Elsevier BV
About: Osteoarthritis and Cartilage is an academic journal published by Elsevier BV. The journal publishes majorly in the area(s): Osteoarthritis & Cartilage. It has an ISSN identifier of 1063-4584. Over the lifetime, 9076 publications have been published receiving 303982 citations.
Topics: Osteoarthritis, Cartilage, Medicine, Chondrocyte, Knee pain
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: Twenty-five carefully worded recommendations have been generated based on a critical appraisal of existing guidelines, a systematic review of research evidence and the consensus opinions of an international, multidisciplinary group of experts for the management of hip and knee osteoarthritis.
2,616 citations
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Tufts Medical Center1, University of Oxford2, Pierre-and-Marie-Curie University3, Erasmus University Rotterdam4, Women's College Hospital5, American Physical Therapy Association6, University of Liège7, Royal North Shore Hospital8, University of Tokyo9, University of Arizona10, Lund University11, Paris Descartes University12, University of Southern Denmark13, Coventry Health Care14
TL;DR: These evidence-based consensus recommendations provide guidance to patients and practitioners on treatments applicable to all individuals with knee OA, as well as therapies that can be considered according to individualized patient needs and preferences.
2,467 citations
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TL;DR: The existence of many new and encouraging biological approaches to cartilage repair justifies the future investment of time and money in this research area, particularly given the extremely high socio-economic importance of such therapeutic strategies in the prevention and treatment of these common joint diseases and traumas.
1,868 citations
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TL;DR: The OARSI cartilage OA histopathology grading system appears consistent and simple to apply as discussed by the authors, however, further studies are required to confirm the system's utility, as well as their reproducibility and validity.
1,813 citations
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TL;DR: A semi-quantitative scoring system that can be applied universally to instability, enzymatic, transgenic and spontaneous OA models may be a useful tool for both new and experienced scorers to sensitively evaluate models and OA mechanisms, and also provide a common paradigm for comparative evaluation across the many groups performing these analyses.
1,701 citations