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How To Prevent Osteoarthritis

What Can I do to Prevent Osteoarthritis?

What Can I do to Prevent Osteoarthritis?

Osteoarthritis (OA) is an age-related condition that is increasing in prevalence and one that can result in significant pain and disability. This chronic disease is becoming one of the most important healthcare challenges for physicians and researchers. OA is a complex disease with an etiology that connects biochemistry to biomechanics, and it incurs serious social, psychological, and economic costs.

The symptoms of clinical OA include stiffness, crepitus, joint pain, limited mobility, and decreased joint function. If OA arises spontaneously and with an unknown course, it is considered ‘idiopathic’. Amongst adults 30 years of age or older, symptomatic OA disease in the knee occurs in approximately 6% of individuals, and symptomatic hip osteoarthritis occurs in roughly 3%. This condition is the most common reason for total knee and hip replacements. Before the age of 50, OA is more prevalent among men than women. After the age of 50 years, however, women are more affected with knee, hand, and foot OA than their male counterparts (Felson et al., 2000).

Pathology

The entire joint is involved in a disease process. This includes cartilage loss with notable changes in the bone lying beneath the cartilage. Other changes include increased thickness of the bony envelope (sclerosis) and osteophyte (bone spur) formation. The soft tissue structures that are inside and around the joint are affected with OA. When OA is present, the synovium (membrane) has inflammatory infiltrates, ligaments are frequently lax, and the bridging muscle weakens (Felson, et al., 2000).

Risk Factors

OA occurs as the result of other conditions, or from a combination of factors. The preventable and modifiable risk factors for OA are obesity, sports participation and activity level, nutritional status, occupation, muscle weakness, bone density, and hormonal influence. It is possible to manage these factors to reduce OA pain and disability (Bijilsma & Knahr, 2007).

Genetics and ethnicity are non-modifiable risk factors. OA has a strong genetic determination, with genetic factors accounting for around 50% of hand and hip OA. Regarding ethnicity, African-American men are 35% more likely than Caucasian men to have hip OA. African-Americans with knee or hip OA have more severe radiographic features of the condition and more bilateral involvement and mobility impairment than Caucasian individuals.

It is unclear if the contributions of biology, lifestyle, and socioeconomic factors to the ethnic differences in OA contribute to pain and disability. Researchers believe that biological and genetic factors such as body mass index (BMI) and genetic biomarker variances do result in ethnic differences occurring in OA cases. In addition, obesity is more prevalent in certain ethnic populations, particularly Hispanic, Native American, and African-American women (Felson et al., 2000).

Primary Prevention

According to Dieppe (1993), risk-factor analyses suggest that many cases of OA can be prevented by reducing obesity, changing certain high-risk occupations, and reducing the incidence of joint trauma. Other preventive measures focus on avoidance of high impact exercise, eating a well-balanced diet, keeping muscles strong, getting the right kind of exercise, and maintaining adequate estrogen and bone density levels.

Secondary Prevention of Osteoarthritis

According to Felson and associates (2000), there are many treatments to reduce OA pain and disability. These include chondrocyte transplantation and other surgical interventions, new anti-inflammatory medications, and health education. Also, Dieppe (1993) found that OA can be controlled and further prevented through drugs that either stimulate cell repair and/or inhibit connective tissue breakdown.

References

Last reviewed 26/Feb/2014

 

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Dr Merlin Thomas

Professor Merlin Thomas is Professor of Medicine at Melbourne’s Monash University, based in the Department of Diabetes. He is both a physician and a scientist. Merlin has a broader interest in all aspects of preventive medicine and ageing. He has published over 270 articles in many of the worlds’ leading medical journals

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