Misaligned Legs, Extra
Pounds Worsen Bad Knees
Being overweight can speed the progression
of knee osteoarthritis, but the effect may be limited to people
who are moderately "bowlegged" or "knock-kneed," a new study suggests.
Among more than 200 adults with
knee osteoarthritis who were followed for 30 months, higher body
mass index, or BMI, was associated with a greater risk of worsening
arthritis.
However, further analysis showed
this was true only of patients who were either moderately bowlegged
-- meaning their legs curved outward in the area of the knee --
or moderately knock-kneed -- meaning their knees curved inward
toward each other.
In contrast, high BMI did not speed
arthritis progression in patients whose legs had a "neutral" alignment
or those with a severe degree of misalignment.
Weight loss has been seen as one
way overweight people might stall the deterioration in their arthritis-affected
knees. The new findings suggest that any benefit of weight loss
may be limited to patients with moderate malalignment in the legs,
the study's lead author, Dr. David T. Felson of Boston University,
stated.
Felson and his colleagues report
the findings in the journal Arthritis & Rheumatism.
Being overweight is already considered
a risk factor for developing knee osteoarthritis, in which the
cartilage of the joint breaks down, leading to pain, stiffness
and immobility. But the effect of body weight on the condition's
progression has been less clear, according to Felson.
To see whether limb alignment affects
the relationship between BMI and arthritis progression, Felson
and his colleagues followed 227 older men and women with knee
arthritis for 30 months, using X-rays to estimate cartilage loss
in the joint over time.
Overall, the researchers found,
arthritis worsened in 23 percent of the affected knees, with the
risk climbing in tandem with BMI -- but only in those with a moderate
degree of limb misalignment.
As for why BMI did not affect arthritis
progression in people with neutral alignment, Felson said it is
likely due to the fact that in these individuals, the heavy "joint
loading" caused by excess pounds is fairly evenly distributed
across the knee.
At the other end of the spectrum,
severe misalignment in the legs may be enough in itself to worsen
knee arthritis, so that no other risk factor -- including a high
BMI -- much of an effect, according to the researchers.
Indeed, they found that limb alignment
alone was a strong predictor of arthritis progression -- with
nearly half of the severely misaligned limbs showing progression,
versus 22 percent and 9 percent of moderately misaligned and neutrally
aligned limbs, respectively.
SOURCE: Arthritis & Rheumatism,
December 2004.
Reference
Source 89
December 8, 2004
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