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Arthritis
Spares Flexible Fingers
People with unusually flexible
fingers seem to be able to give the slip to osteoarthritis in
the hand, new research suggests.
The study of 1,043 men and women
found that the 4 percent with "hypermobile" joints -- commonly
called double-jointedness -- were two-thirds less likely than
their less flexible peers to have arthritis in the middle joint
of the finger.
A similar benefit was seen among
adults whose joints were highly flexible in their youth but had
since grown rusty, according to findings published in the journal
Arthritis & Rheumatism.
All of the study participants were
at risk of extensive hand arthritis because all had a family history
of the condition and each had shown X-ray evidence of arthritis
in the joint near the fingertip.
The results are somewhat surprising
since joint hypermobility has been suspected of raising the risk
of osteoarthritis, the form of arthritis associated with aging
and caused by wear and tear of the joints.
One study has linked extreme joint
flexibility to a higher risk of knee arthritis. It's thought that
excessive range of motion in a joint may put abnormal stress on
it, as well as raise the risk of injury -- both of which may predispose
a person to arthritis.
But in this study, flexibility
-- and limber fingers, in particular -- appeared to be an asset.
The researchers, led by Dr. Virginia
B. Kraus of Duke University Medical Center in Durham, North Carolina,
assessed hypermobility with a series of standard tests. Two of
the tests looked at how far backward the little finger and thumb
could bend. An analysis of a sub-group of the participants showed
that all who were deemed hypermobile owed the label, in part,
to highly bendable digits.
A previous study found that joint
hypermobility appeared to protect against arthritis in musicians
who need nimble fingers, such as flutists and string musicians.
The current findings, Kraus and
her colleagues conclude, suggest that extreme joint mobility may
stave off hand arthritis even in people who are genetically predisposed.
According to the researchers, a
person's grip strength may sway the risk of developing arthritis
in the fingers, and research suggests that hypermobile people
tend to have lesser grip strength. It's possible, they suggest,
that hypermobility alters joint stress produced during gripping
or pinching motions.
SOURCE: Arthritis & Rheumatism,
July 2004.
Reference
Source 89
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