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You are here: Home > Ills & Conditions > Arthritis and Your Weight


Arthritis and Your Weight


Related topics:
•  Arthritis Center

By Paige Bierma
CONSUMER HEALTH INTERACTIVE

Below:
 • Preventing arthritis
 • Reducing pain through weight loss


Few of us need to be given more reasons to drop those extra pounds. We could do it for our hearts or our chins, for lower medical bills or freer spirits.

But did you know you should also do it for your joints?

The fact is, being overweight increases your risk of degenerative arthritis in the weight-bearing joints, especially the knees. According to the US Surgeon General's Office, your odds of developing osteoarthritis (OA) -- the most common type of the disease -- increase by 9 to 13 percent for every two-pound increase in weight. In other words, being 20 pounds overweight doubles your chances of getting arthritis.

Preventing arthritis

Conversely, losing just 12 pounds halves the risk of osteoarthritis for overweight women, according to Dr. David Felson, the former director of the Arthritis Center and currently a professor at Boston University School of Medicine. "There is no doubt that being overweight contributes to getting osteoarthritis and to making it worse," Felson told Arthritis Today magazine. The extra weight is especially hard on the knees, since every extra pound you carry adds a three or four pound load to each knee, Felson says.

Study after study has established the link between being overweight or obese and having arthritis in the hips or knees. According to one study, obese women were nearly four times as likely as non-obese women to develop osteoarthritis of the knee, and the risk for obese men was nearly five times greater. In fact, the US Centers for Disease Control reports that 66 percent of people with arthritis are overweight or obese.

Reducing pain through weight loss

If you already have osteoarthritis, doctors say that losing just a few pounds can significantly decrease your pain, not to mention lower your chances of developing OA in other weight-bearing joints. Remember, for every pound you lose, it's like taking 4 pounds off each knee every time you take a step.

One problem is that osteoarthritis often makes it painful to exercise, leading many sufferers to avoid physical activity and put on even more weight. But low-impact exercises, like water aerobics and bicycling, can help your sore joints and relieve stiffness and swelling. To find out more, read our story on the benefits of exercise for people with arthritis.

-- Paige Bierma is a health and medical writer who has contributed to Hippocrates, Safety + Health magazine, and Vibe.



References


Anderson J and Felson DT. "Factors associated with osteoarthritis of the knee in the first national health and nutrition examination (HANES I). American Journal of Epidemiology. 1998. Vol. 128: 179-189.

Cicuttini FM, et al. "The association of obesity with osteoarthritis of the hand and knee in women: a twin study." Journal of Rheumatology. 1995. Vol. 23: 1221-1226.

Bartlett, Susan, Ph.D. "Osteoarthritis and Body Weight," John Hopkins Arthritis website. www.hopkins-arthritis.som.jhmi.edu/mngmnt/osteoandweight.html

Felson, David T. "Weight and osteoarthritis." Journal of Rheumatology. 1995. Vol. 250: 503-508.

Boston University Medical Campus. Faculty. http://www.bumc.bu.edu/Dept/ContentPF.aspx?PageID=5659&DepartmentID=353

Centers for Disease Control. Arthritis Related Statistics. June 2007. http://www.cdc.gov/arthritis/data_statistics/arthritis_related_statistics.htm



Reviewed by Michael Potter, M.D., an attending physician and associate clinical professor at the University of California, San Francisco. He is board-certified in family practice.


Our reviewers are members of Consumer Health Interactive's medical advisory board.
To learn more about our writers and editors, click here.

First published September 26, 2002
Last updated June 10, 2008
Copyright © 2002 Consumer Health Interactive


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