Low-Dose Radiation May Help Knee Pain and Osteoarthritis

Staff
By Staff
8 Min Read
New research suggests an unconventional treatment may be just what the doctor ordered for combating the joint pain, stiffness, and swelling of knee osteoarthritis: low-dose radiation treatments.

Low-dose radiation for osteoarthritis isn’t a new treatment per se; it’s more commonly used outside of the United States. “In some European countries, low-dose radiation has been used for arthritis and other painful conditions for decades,” says Byoung Hyuck Kim, MD, PhD, principal investigator on the trial and an assistant professor of radiation oncology at the Seoul National University College of Medicine and Boramae Medical Center in Korea.

Here’s what the recent study discovered, plus what to know before considering radiation for knee pain.

Low-Dose Radiation Can Have a Big Impact on Knee Pain

For the study, researchers recruited 114 people with mild-to-moderate knee osteoarthritis at three academic centers in Korea. Participants were randomly assigned to receive six sessions of one of the following:

  • A very low dose of radiation at 0.3 Gy
  • Low-dose radiation at 3 Gy
  • A sham treatment where the patients went through the same setup as the others, but the machine didn’t deliver radiation

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