|
Vitamin D May Help Arthritic
Knees Function Better
Boston researchers report a link between
low serum levels of vitamin D and decreased knee function in patients
with osteoarthritis of the knee.
At the annual meeting of the American
College of Rheumatology in San Antonio, Dr. David Felson of Boston
University presented his team's findings from 221 subjects recruited
from the Boston VA Medical Center. All had knee arthritis and
reported knee pain on most days in the month before they joined
the study.
The investigators measured blood
levels of vitamin D at the start and again after 15 and 30 months.
They compared change in vitamin D levels with changes in knee
pain, physical function and muscle strength during the 30-month
study period.
"We found a relationship between
serum levels of vitamin D and knee function," lead investigator
Dr. Kristin Baker stated. Low levels were associated with higher
levels of pain and disability and to a lesser extent muscle weakness.
"We also found that about 50 percent
of the population were deficient in vitamin D," Baker commented.
In previous studies conducted in
Minnesota, "almost 100 percent of the subjects with muscle pain
were vitamin D deficient," she added. "It may be that vitamin
D increases muscle strength or decreases postural sway, we don't
really know."
Baker pointed out that this was
not a study of vitamin D as a treatment for osteoarthritis, but
she speculated that "we may need higher serum levels of vitamin
D than we originally thought...This is one more piece of evidence
that vitamin D intake should be increased."
Reference
Source 89
October 21, 2004
For
more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
|