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GLOSSARY OF KEY TERMS
A drug used to relieve pain and fever
Originally a Chinese practice of inserting fine needles through the skin at specific points especially to cure disease or relieve pain
Agents for producing pain relief
Pain in one or more joints
Inflammation of a joint or joints resulting in pain, swelling and stiffness
The operative formation or restoration of a joint
An instrument for visualizing the interior of a hollow organ that is inserted through an incision near a joint (as the knee) and is used for the visual examination, diagnosis, and treatment of the interior of a joint
Examination of a joint with a scope
Of or relating to a joint
Cartilage that covers the articular surfaces of bones
Freedom from infection, sterile
The withdrawal of fluid from the body
Derived from birds
A substance or mixture of substances that in a solution tends to stabilize and neutralize, within limits, both acids and bases
A usually translucent somewhat elastic tissue that composes most of the skeleton
Inflammation of synovial fluid lasting for a long period of time or marked by frequent recurrence
Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services
Occurring or existing concurrently but unrelated pathological or disease process
Occurring on, affecting, or acting in conjunction with a part on the opposite side of the body
To make a treatment or procedure inadvisable
A steroid hormone produced by the adrenal cortex (the outer portion of the adrenal glands); administered as drugs they reduce swelling and decrease the body's immune response
Any of a class of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs to relieve the pain and inflammation of arthritis and thought to minimize gastrointestinal side effects
Disease that leads to the gradual deterioration of a joint; also called Osteoarthritis.
Capacity for producing a desired result or effect
And ideal viscosupplementation solution enhances elastic (high impact- such as running) and viscous (low impact- such as walking) properties in a knee with osteoarthritis
Any of a group of endogenous peptides that bind chiefly to opiate receptors (in the cell membrane) and produce some of the same pharmacological effects (pain relief) as those of opiates (dulls the senses and induces relaxation)
Relating to or affecting both stomach and intestine
Any of a group of steroid hormones, such as cortisone, that are produced by the adrenal cortex (the outer portion of the adrenal glands) and have anti-inflammatory properties
The maintenance of relatively stable internal physiological conditions such as body temperature or the pH of blood
A substance found naturally in joint fluid that acts as a shock absorber and lubricant in the knee joint and is necessary for the joint to function properly.
A substance injected into a knee with osteoarthritis. Serves to restore lubrication and shock absorbing capabilities that have been depleted due to the disease of osteoarthritis.
Relating to or producing an immune response
An injection administered by entering a joint
The act of removing a fluid from a joint in the body by a hollow needle connected with a suction syringe
A transparent, lubricating fluid secreted by a membrane of an articulation (place of union between two or more joints) or bursa (a saclike body cavity between a tendon and bone)
Examination of a knee through an endoscope (an instrument for visualizing the interior of a hollow organ)
A special imaging technique used to image internal structures of the body particularly the soft tissues
The sum of the atomic weights of all the atoms in a molecule
A non-drug therapy, such as exercise, with therapeutic value
A nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug such as ibuprofen
Ultra-pure natural hyaluronan that is injected intraarticular into the knee and is indicated in the treatment of pain in osteoarthritis of the knee in patients who have failed to respond adequately to conservative nonpharmacologic therapy and to simple analgesics
Arthritis typically with onset during middle or old age that is characterized by degenerative (gradual deterioration of joint) and sometimes abnormal growth in the bone and cartilage of one or more joints and a progressive wearing down of opposing joint surfaces with consequent distortion of joint position and is marked symptomatically especially by pain, swelling, and stiffness; abbreviation (OA)
A bony outgrowth
An approximately 0.9 percent solution of sodium chloride; also called normal saline solution
A therapy that uses physical agents such as exercise, massage and other modalities
An inert substance used especially in controlled experiments testing the efficacy of another substance such as a drug
Something that preserves or has the power of preserving
Severe inflammation of the joint often with significant pain normally occurring 24 to 72 hours after intraarticular injection; often requires clinical intervention
Of or relating to the phenomena of flowing matter
A sharp, bony outgrowth located at the end of a bone
Situated beneath cartilage
A lubricating fluid resembling the white of an egg, secreted by certain membranes, as those of the joints; also called joint fluid
The inner membrane of a joint capsule surrounding a freely movable joint.
Repair of a damaged joint by replacing with a synthetic joint implant, made of either plastic, ceramic, titanium or stainless steel, in an effort to return normal function to affected joint
Having the quality of being thick and slow-flowing
The property of resistance to flow in a fluid
A procedure that replaces diseased synovial fluid in people with osteoarthritis of the knee in an effort to decrease pain, enhance range of motion and increase joint mobility