Osteoarthritis Runs in Families
Siblings of people with knee osteoarthritis
have twice the risk of developing the problem themselves, which
suggests a person's genes play a role in the condition.
The finding appears in the current
issue of the Annals of Rheumatic Diseases.
The study included 490 people with
severe knee osteoarthritis (OA), 773 of their siblings over age
40, and 1,729 people with knee pain. The researchers took X-rays
of the knees of the siblings and the patients with knee pain to
look for signs of OA.
The study found the siblings were
more than twice as likely to have knee OA compared with the patients
with knee pain. That was true even when the researchers factored
in major risk factors such as smoking, being overweight, age and
gender.
This genetic risk for OA among
the siblings was spread across different ages, but brothers were
more likely to have OA than sisters.
OA is a degenerative condition
associated with aging that's characterized by inflammation and
loss of joint cartilage. The knee is the joint most often affected
by OA.
More
information on Osteoarthritis
Reference
Source 101
August 13, 2004
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