Researchers wanted to see if adding exercise to a reduced-calorie diet could help with inflammation and knee pain in people who are overweight or obese and have knee osteoarthritis. They studied 23 people for four weeks. One group cut calories, while another group cut calories and also did moderate cycling five times a week.
After four weeks, the group that did both diet and exercise had lower levels of a specific inflammation marker called IL-6 and reported less knee pain than the group that only cut calories. They were also faster on a stair-climbing test. However, there was no difference between the groups for another common inflammation marker called CRP.
The main reason to be careful with these results is the study's size. With only 23 people finishing the trial, it's a very small study. The program also lasted just four weeks, so we don't know if the benefits would continue. The study did not report on safety or if people found the program easy to stick with.
For now, this research suggests a promising direction. It hints that combining exercise with dietary changes might offer more immediate relief for knee pain and some types of inflammation than diet changes alone. However, much larger and longer studies are needed to confirm these early findings.