# Comparing Mannitol and Hypertonic Dextrose Injections for Knee Osteoarthritis Pain and Function: A Randomised Trial

**Authors:** Nasrin Barzegar, Rezvan Ghaderpanah, Hamid Reza Farpour, Mohammad Esmaeil Ghorbani Nejad

PMC · DOI: 10.31138/mjr.280224.cmd · 2025-03-31

## TL;DR

This study compares two injection therapies for knee osteoarthritis and finds both are equally effective in reducing pain and improving function.

## Contribution

A randomized trial comparing the efficacy of intra-articular mannitol versus hypertonic dextrose in knee osteoarthritis.

## Key findings

- Both mannitol and hypertonic dextrose injections significantly improved pain and function in knee osteoarthritis patients.
- No statistically significant difference was found between the two treatments over an 8-week follow-up.
- Both treatments were safe with no serious side effects reported.

## Abstract

Knee osteoarthritis is a chronic and age-related disease that causes joint stiffness, pain, and biomechanical changes in the joint, resulting in decreased activity and performance. Prolotherapy is one of the methods of injection therapy in the management of this disease. Drugs such as hypertonic dextrose and mannitol have been introduced as prolotherapy drugs. The aim of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of intra-articular injection of mannitol compared to prolotherapy with hypertonic dextrose in terms of pain relief and functional improvement in patients with knee osteoarthritis.

A total of 48 patients with KOA were randomly divided into two groups: hypertonic dextrose (24 patients) and mannitol (26 patients). All patients received three intra-articular injections of either hypertonic dextrose or mannitol at two-week intervals. Visual Analogue Pain Scale (VAS), Oxford Knee Scale (OKS), and Western Ontario McMaster University Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC) questionnaire scores were the outcome measures assessed before and 2, 4, and 8 weeks after the injections.

There were no statistically significant differences in pre-injection demographic characteristics between the two groups (p > 0.05). Results showed that VAS and OKS scores decreased over time (p < 0.001). Both interventions significantly improved the mean scores of WOMAC pain, WOMAC stiffness, WOMAC function, and WOMAC total score. There were not any serious side effects in any of the groups.

The results showed that prolotherapy is an effective and safe treatment. Although both groups had improvements in outcome measures during follow-up up to 8 weeks after the intervention, no statistically significant difference was found between the two groups.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** mannitol (PubChem CID 6251)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** stiffness (MESH:C566112), Knee Osteoarthritis (MESH:D020370), Pain (MESH:D010146), joint stiffness (MESH:C535724), Osteoarthritis (MESH:D010003)
- **Chemicals:** Mannitol (MESH:D008353), Dextrose (MESH:D005947)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12183453/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12183453