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Investigation of the frictional response of osteoarthritic human tibiofemoral joints and the potential beneficial tribological effect of healthy synovial fluid
Osteoarthritis and Cartilage , 07/06/09
Caligaris M et al. - The friction coefficient of human tibiofemoral cartilage does not necessarily increase with naturally increasing OA, for visual stages ranging from 1 to 3. This outcome may be explained by the fact that interstitial fluid pressurization is not necessarily defeated by advancing degeneration. This study also demonstrates that healthy SF decreases the friction coefficient of OA joints relative to PBS.
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Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled trial on the potential modes of action of sheaflex70tm in osteoarthritis
Phytotherapy Research, 12/15/09
A comparison of fatigue correlates in rheumatoid arthritis and osteoarthritis: Disparity in associations with disability, anxiety and sleep disturbance
Rheumatology, 12/14/09
The morbid anatomy of "erosive osteoarthritis" of the interphalangeal finger joints. an optimized scoring system to monitor disease progression in affected joints
Annals of Rheumatic Diseases, 12/11/09
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