Trials / Not Yet Recruiting
Not Yet RecruitingNCT07502040
Impact of Exercise Access on Physio Outcomes Post Knee Replacement
A Feasibility Study To Determine The Effect Of An Artificial Intelligence (AI) Based Motion Tracking Exercise Programme (Kemtai) On Amount Of Physiotherapy Contact And Length Of Hospital Stay After Knee Arthroplasty Compared With Exercise As Usual .
- Status
- Not Yet Recruiting
- Phase
- N/A
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 40 (estimated)
- Sponsor
- Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust · Other Government
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 18 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Not accepted
Summary
To stay strong, patients should do some strength training at least twice a week. However arthritic pain can limit walking and activity. The wait for knee surgery can be long, which can lead to loss of muscle strength. Patients who need a new knee joint tend to be older. If older people do not exercise and become weak, they tire easily, and may take longer to recover after surgery. Patients recover faster after having a new knee joint if their leg muscles are strong. This is why exercise before surgery can help people to make the most of their new joint. Patients come to a joint school where the investigators show them exercises and advise how to get ready for surgery. Patients are given a sheet of pictures and prompts for each exercise but the investigators know that some people don't do the exercises that they are given. Exercises are more likely to be done if they are fun, if people can see they make a difference, if they know what to do, and if their physiotherapist can check what they are doing.
Detailed description
To stay strong, patients should do some strength training at least twice a week. However arthritic pain can limit walking and activity. The wait for knee surgery can be long, which can lead to loss of muscle strength. Patients who need a new knee joint tend to be older. If older people do not exercise and become weak, they tire easily, and may take longer to recover after surgery. Patients recover faster after having a new knee joint if their leg muscles are strong. This is why exercise before surgery can help people to make the most of their new joint. Patients come to a joint school where the investigators show them exercises and advise how to get ready for surgery. Patients are given a sheet of pictures and prompts for each exercise but the investigators know that some people don't do the exercises that they are given. Exercises are more likely to be done if they are fun, if people can see they make a difference, if they know what to do, and if their physiotherapist can check what they are doing. Patients come to a joint school where the investigators show them exercises and advise how to get ready for surgery. Patients are given a sheet of pictures and prompts for each exercise but the investigators know that some people don't do the exercises that they are given. Exercises are more likely to be done if they are fun, if people can see they make a difference, if they know what to do, and if their physiotherapist can check what they are doing. Kemtai is an online exercise program which shows how to do the exercises and tells the patient how to move in the right way if they are not doing it correctly. The patient gets a score to show how well they are doing the exercise. This makes the task fun. Their physio can see when they have exercised and if they are making progress. The investigators will perform a small study called a pilot randomised controlled trial to find out how many people are eligible to take part, how many agree to take part, and the reasons for not being able to do so. This study will tell us how many patients can use online programmes and have access to computers, tablets or smartphones that can run the Kemtai programme. The investigators can provide data if someone is able to take part but are unable to provide a smartphone or tablet. This study will tell us how many patients would need data or devices to take part in a bigger study. The investigators also want to know if there are any differences in amount of exercise done before surgery, and in length of stay in hospital, amount of physiotherapy, pain, movement and quality of life after surgery between those who used a paper exercise prompt sheet and those who used an online exercise programme (Kemtai). Joint school physios will identify who is eligible for the study. If interested, the patients will be given a leaflet and invited to watch a presentation about the study. Those patients who wish to take part will be asked to give informed consent and asked to fill in three questionnaires (Oxford knee score, EQ-5D-5L and the visual analogue scale). Patients will also be asked for some information (name, address, gender, ethnic group, e-mail, and year of birth) to help the investigators compare the two groups. A computer programme will inform the investigators if the patient should have Kemtai access or a sheet of exercises. No more physiotherapy is given until after the patients have their new joint. The investigators offer help to access the Kemtai programme and will note what help is needed. After surgery, the number of physio contacts and the number of hours in hospital will be counted. The number of times that the patients exercised before surgery will be collected either from the exercise diary that contains the paper exercise list, or from the Kemtai programme. At six weeks after surgery patients will be contacted by phone and asked to give their scores for the three questionnaires again. A patient's time in the study stops at this point. A team, which includes patients who have had new knee joints, will look at the results and decide how a larger study should be run.
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| DEVICE | Kemtai Digital App | This group will be granted access to the Kemtai digital App (the experimental device intervention) which provides an identical exercise prescription to the comparator intervention but supports the patient through the exercise with tracking and real time (mediated via AI) advice on corrective exercise techniques. |
| BEHAVIORAL | NHS standard care | This group will be provided the NHS standard of care which is a paper based handout illustrating the exercises and the prescription to be done before and after surgery. |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2026-03-31
- Primary completion
- 2026-09-30
- Completion
- 2026-11-28
- First posted
- 2026-03-30
- Last updated
- 2026-03-30
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07502040. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.