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Dive into the research topics where Ole Rintek Madsen is active.

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Featured researches published by Ole Rintek Madsen.


Acta Orthopaedica Scandinavica | 1999

Early changes in muscle strength after total knee arthroplasty : A 6-month follow-up of 30 knees

Jan S Lorentzen; Michael M Petersen; Christine Brot; Ole Rintek Madsen

We studied 30 patients with arthrosis in one knee operated on with a cemented (n 26) or an uncemented total knee arthroplasty (TKA) (n 4). Full weight-bearing from the first postoperative day was allowed in all patients, and they received standard postoperative physiotherapy. 1 week prior to surgery, and after 3 and 6 months, isokinetic and isometric muscle strength in both legs were measured, using a Cybex 6000 dynamometer. Isokinetic tests showed a bilateral, significant, and progressive increase (30-53%) in flexor muscle strength most pronounced in the operated legs. Isokinetic extensor strength increased significantly (14-18%) in the operated legs, while in the contralateral legs, a limited increase was found. Isometric flexion strength significantly decreased in the operated knees (17%). Isometric extension strength showed a temporary decrease at 3 months, which returned to the preoperative level. No significant change in isometric strength was observed in the contralateral legs. The knee pain during the muscle strength measurements decreased significantly from the preoperative level, which may indicate that the substantial pain relief within 3 months after a TKA is an important factor for evaluation of muscle strength.


Journal of Internal Medicine | 1999

Relationships between bone mineral density, serum vitamin D metabolites and calcium:phosphorus intake in healthy perimenopausal women

Christine Brot; Niklas Rye Jørgensen; Ole Rintek Madsen; Lars Bjørn Jensen; O. H. Sørensen

Abstract. Brot C, Jørgensen N, Madsen OR, Jensen LB, Sørensen OH (Copenhagen Municipal Hospital, Copenhagen, Denmark). Relationships between bone mineral density, serum vitamin D metabolites and calcium:phosphorus intake in healthy perimenopausal women. J Intern Med 1999; 245: 509–516.


Clinical Rheumatology | 1995

Isometric and isokinetic quadriceps strength in gonarthrosis ; inter-relations between quadriceps strength, walking ability, radiology, subchondral bone density and pain

Ole Rintek Madsen; Henning Bliddal; Charlotte Egsmose; Jesper Sylvest

SummaryPatients with osteoarthrosis suffer from disability and pain. We measured isokinetic and isometric peak torque in 20 women with gonarthrosis (GA) and in 26 healthy controls. Relationships between muscle strength, walking and stair climbing time, pain level and pain disability scores as assessed by the patients using an extensive questionnaire, radiological changes and subchondral sclerosis expressed as bone mineral density (BMD, g/cm2) of the proximal tibia were studied.Precision errors of the torque measurements in both GA patients and controls were approximately 6%. In the GA patients, isokinetic and isometric quadriceps strength was reduced by 40 and 15% (p<0.01) respectively, and walking and stair climbing time was increased by 30% (p<0.005). Isokinetic strength was a better predictor of pain level and pain disability scores than isometric strength and radiological stage. Walking time and stair climbing time were not associated with quadriceps strength, pain level, pain disability scores or radiological changes. Subchondral BMD was not predictive of pain.The study suggests that quadriceps strength assessed by isokinetic dynamometry in GA is a reliable measurement. Isokinetic strength was pronouncedly reduced compared to isometric strength and was a more important predictor of pain and pain disability than isometric strength. These findings should be taken into consideration when planning exercise studies and programmes in GA.


European Journal of Applied Physiology | 1996

Torque, total work, power, torque acceleration energy and acceleration time assessed on a dynamometer: reliability of knee and elbow extensor and flexor strength measurements

Ole Rintek Madsen

Isometric torque and isokinetic peak torque, total work, power, torque acceleration energy and acceleration time at 30, 120 and 240° · s−1 of the knee and elbow extensors and flexors were measured using an isokinetic dynamometer in 24 healthy women. Intra-session variation of the measurements was evaluated and the short-term and long-term reliability was assessed by repeating all procedures after averages of 2 and 30 days, respectively. The effect of learning on peak torque during a session was also evaluated. Moreover, the effect of general warming-up on knee extensor and flexor strength was examined on a separate day. Using correlations, numerous studies have indicated that muscle strength measurements are reliable. Correlations, however, are inappropriate and misleading in studies on reliability. In the present study reliability of each strength variable was expressed as the coefficient of variation (CV). With the protocol used, neither learning nor warming-up had any significant effect on strength. As expected, intra-session variation tended to be less than short-term and long-term inter-session variation. The CVs for strength variables measured 30 days apart exceeded 5% for all variables and rose to 107% for acceleration time. Substantial between-subject variation of individual CVs were found. The study demonstrated that muscle strength measurements may be highly unreliable in the individual subject.


European Journal of Applied Physiology | 1997

Validation of a dual energy X-ray absorptiometer: measurement of bone mass and soft tissue composition.

Ole Rintek Madsen; Jens-Erik Beck Jensen; O. H. Sørensen

Abstract We investigated the reproducibility of total and regional body composition measurements performed on a dual energy X-ray absorptiometer (DXA). A group of 38 women aged 21–81 (mean 52. 4) years was scanned twice with repositioning to determine intra-observer reproducibility of measurements of bone mineral density (BMD, g · cm−2), bone mineral content (BMC, g), lean mass (LM, kg) and fat mass (FM, kg) of the total body and of the major subregions of the body. In addition, the ability of the DXA machine to detect changes in LM and FM (simulated by placing 11.1 and 22.3 kg porcine lard on the body of 11 subjects) was examined. Coefficients of variations calculated from the root mean square averages of individual standard deviations were as follows (BMD, BMC, FM, LM): 1.4%, 1.1%, 1.4%, 1.7% (total body), 2.2%, 2.1%,-,- (head), 2.8%, 2.8%, 2.0%, 2.2% (trunk), 3.6%, 3.9%, 4.0%, 4.9% (arms), 2.7%, 1.3%, 2.6%, 2.8% (legs). Percentage fat (%fat) of exogenous lard was 81.3 (SD 3.5)% as assessed by the absorptiometer which corresponded well with the result of chemical analysis (82.8%). Estimated %fat of exogenous lard was not influenced by initial body mass or percentage body fat. Percentages of expected mean values with 11.1 kg lard placed on the body were 99.9 (SD 0.3) for body mass, 100.5 (SD 2.1) for LM, and 99.5 (SD 3.5) for FM. BMD was overestimated by 3.2% (P < 0.005) with 11.1 kg lard on the body. BMD as well as BMC increased significantly with 22.3␣kg lard on the body (P < 0.005). The results showed that BMD, BMC, LM, and FM of the total body were precisely estimated by the DXA machine used. Regional measurements were less precise. Changes in total body soft tissue composition were precisely and accurately estimated. The lard placed on the body falsely affected BMD and BMC measurements. Changes in body mass could have a similar effect.


Clinical Rheumatology | 1997

Body composition and muscle strength in women scheduled for a knee or hip replacement. A comparative study of two groups of osteoarthritic women

Ole Rintek Madsen; Christine Brot; M. M. Petersen; O. H. Sørensen

SummaryIt is unclear whether patients with knee osteoarthritis (OA) and hip OA differ regarding soft tissue composition and bone mineral density (BMD). A total of 42 women waiting for a replacement of the hip (n=20) or the knee (n=22) due to OA were examined. Fat mass (FM), percent body fat (%fat), lean mass (LM) and BMD were measured by dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA). Knee extensor and flexor strength was measured by an isokinetic dynamometer. No significant differences in age, height, disease duration, Lequesne score or pain scores were found between the groups. Comparing the radiographic changes of the knees with those of the hips, changes were most severe in the joints which were to be replaced. Body weight, body mass index, total and regional FM, and %fat were more than 15% higher in patients waiting for a knee replacement (p<0.001). Also lean mass tended to be higher in the knee patients. Differences in BMD did not remain statistically significant after correction for body weight. Muscle strength was similar in the two groups but was reduced by 20% in the legs in which the joint was to be replaced compared to the contralateral legs. However, the mean difference in lean mass between the two legs was only 3% (p<0.05). The scores for pain felt during strength testing were significantly higher for the involved legs than for the contralateral legs. In conclusion, fat mass values were considerably higher in patients scheduled for a knee replacement. Impaired strength performance in OA may be more strongly associated with pain than with reduced muscle mass.


European Journal of Applied Physiology | 1997

Muscle strength and soft tissue composition as measured by dual energy x-ray absorptiometry in women aged 18–87 years

Ole Rintek Madsen; Ulrik Birk Lauridsen; Andreas Hartkopp; O. H. Sørensen

Dual energy x-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) offers the possibility of assessing regional soft tissue composition, i.e. lean mass (LM) and fat mass: LM may be considered a measure of muscle mass. We examined age-related differences in LM, percentage fat (%fat) and muscle strength in 100 healthy non-athletic women aged 18-87 years. Relationships between muscle strength and leg LM in 20 elite female weight lifters and in 18 inactive women with previous hip fractures were also studied. The LM and %fat of the whole body, trunk, arms and legs were derived from a whole body DEXA scan. Isokinetic knee extensor strength (KES) and flexor strength (KFS) at 30 degrees.s-1 were assessed using an isokinetic dynamometer. The women aged 71-87 years had 35% lower KES and KFS than the women aged 18-40 years (P < 0.0001). Differences in LM were less pronounced. The LM of the legs, for instance, was 15% lower in the old than in the young women (P < 0.0001). In a multiple regression analysis with age, body mass, height and leg LM or KES as independent variables and KES or leg LM as the dependent variable, age was the most important predictor of KES (r(partial) = -0.74, P < 0.0001). The same applied to KFS. Body mass, not age, was the most important predictor of leg LM (r(partial) = 0.65, P < 0.0001) and of LM at all other measurement sites. The LM measured at different regions decreased equally with increasing age. The KES:leg LM ratio was negatively correlated with age (r = -0.70, P < 0.0001). The weight lifters had significantly higher KES:leg LM ratios than age-matched controls (+ 12%, P < 0.0001) and vice versa for the women with previous hip fractures (-36%, P < 0.0001). In conclusion, from our study it would seem that in healthy nonathletic women, age is a more important determinant of muscle strength than is LM as measured by DEXA. Muscle strengthening exercises and inactivity seem to have a considerably stronger influence on muscle strength than on LM.


Osteoarthritis and Cartilage | 1994

Bone mineral distribution of the proximal tibia in gonarthrosis assessed in vivo by photon absorption

Ole Rintek Madsen; Ole Schaadt; Henning Bliddal; Charlotte Egsmose; Jesper Sylvest

Regional bone mineral density (BMD, g/cm2) of the proximal tibia including the subchondral plate was measured in vivo by dual photon absorptiometry (DPA). Twenty-one women and six men with gonarthrosis (GA) were examined. Twenty-four healthy women served as controls for the women. The precision error of the BMD measurements ranged from 1.4-3.7% depending on the region measured. Subchondral BMD correlated significantly to the radiologic stage (P < 0.05). Compared to the controls, BMD of the subchondral plate, BMD of the medial condyle, the medial to lateral distribution ratio of subchondral BMD and the ratio between BMD of the subchondral plate and of the immediately underlying region were significantly increased in patients with predominantly medial GA (P < 0.05-0.0001). The BMD of the lateral condyle was lower in GA patients than in controls (P < 0.05). In patients with unilateral GA, the above-mentioned changes were found in the affected tibia compared to the normal knee in the same individual (P < 0.05). In contrast to any of the patients with varus deformity, the two patients with valgus deformity had higher BMD of the lateral condyle than of the medial. No differences in BMD of the distal forearm or the ultradistal region of the proximal tibia were found between the GA patients and the controls. The study shows that regional bone changes of the proximal tibia in GA can be measured precisely and noninvasively in vivo by DPA.


Clinical Rheumatology | 1996

Assessment of extensor and flexor strength in the individual gonarthrotic patient: Interpretation of performance changes

Ole Rintek Madsen; C. Brot

SummaryThe intra-session and inter-session reproducibility of knee extensor and flexor strength measurements were examined in 21 gonarthrotic subjects (ten women and eleven men). Using the Cybex 6000 dynamometer, isokinetic peak torque and total work at 30 and 120 degrees/second and isometric peak torque were measured three times on separate days within two weeks by the same examiner. The reproducibility of walking and stair climbing time measurements was also assessed. The concept of critical difference (i.e. the difference between two measurements which would be statistically significant when applied to a reference group in steady state) for the interpretation of muscle strength data obtained by monitoring individual patients is presented.Individual coefficients of variation (CV) were calculated for each muscle strength variable. Depending on the velocity and on whether peak torque or total work were measured, the median CV of intra-session and inter-session extensor strength measurements ranged from 1.5–4.9% and 7.4–10.1%, respectively. CVs for flexor strength measurements were significantly higher. Substantial variability of within subject variances were found, e.g. the 80% central range of CVs for extensor toruqe at 30 degrees/second was 2.5–29.5% (inter-session). Calculated from CVs, critical differences for inter-session measurements exceeded 30% for all muscle strength variables. Median CVs for walking and stair-climbing time were 7.0% and 4.9%, respectively.In conclusion, the large CVs and corresponding critical differences may be a major limitation in the use of muscle strength measurements in the individual gonarthrotic patient.


Scandinavian Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1993

Septicaemia caused by an unusual Neisseria meningitidis species following dental extraction.

Lars Møller Pedersen; Ole Rintek Madsen; Ernö Gutschik

Dental procedures are frequently followed by transient bacteraemia. Bacteria obtained in the blood cultures are similar to bacteria of the normal mouth flora such as oral streptococci. The potential risk of bacteraemia following dental manipulations is infective endocarditis. We report here a rare case of septicaemia following dental extraction in a 84-year-old woman. Neisseria meningitidis group B type 1P1.9 was cultured from the blood. Postextraction septicaemia caused by meningococci has not been described before. Meningococcaemia as a rare complication of dental extraction is emphasized.

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O. H. Sørensen

Copenhagen Municipal Hospital

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Charlotte Egsmose

Copenhagen Municipal Hospital

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Christine Brot

Copenhagen Municipal Hospital

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Henning Bliddal

Copenhagen Municipal Hospital

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Jesper Sylvest

Copenhagen Municipal Hospital

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Jens-Erik Beck Jensen

Copenhagen Municipal Hospital

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Niklas Rye Jørgensen

University of Southern Denmark

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Ole Schaadt

Copenhagen Municipal Hospital

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A. Hartkopp

Copenhagen Municipal Hospital

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