Obesity a leading cause of knee osteoarthritis

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New research from the University of Sydney reveals that obesity, having a knee injury and occupational risks such as shift work and lifting heavy loads are primary causes of knee osteoarthritis.

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From: The University of Sydney

Obesity a leading cause of knee osteoarthritis

  • Obesity, having a knee injury, and working a heavy manual job are among the key risk factors for developing knee osteoarthritis
  • Older age mildly associated with increased risk and women twice as likely to develop the condition than men
  • Consuming a Mediterranean diet and increasing dietary fibre could lower the risk of the condition

New research from the University of Sydney reveals that obesity, having a knee injury and occupational risks such as shift work and lifting heavy loads are primary causes of knee osteoarthritis.

The study also found that following a mediterranean diet, drinking green tea and eating dark bread could reduce the risk of developing knee osteoarthritis.

Published in Osteoarthritis and Cartilage, the study was led by Associate Professor Christina Abdel Shaheed and Dr Vicky Duong from the Faculty of Medicine and Health’s Sydney Musculoskeletal Health, a joint initiative between the University of Sydney, Sydney Local Health District and Northern Sydney Local Health District.

Using data from 131 studies conducted between 1988 to 2024, the researchers examined over 150 risk factors in participants ranging from 20 to 80 years old to determine which were associated with an increased risk of developing knee osteoarthritis.

“Knee osteoarthritis is a debilitating condition that affects over 500 million people around the world and is a leading cause of disability. Our research found that while factors such as eating ultra-processed foods and being overweight increase the risk, addressing lifestyle factors – such as losing weight or adopting a better diet – could significantly improve people’s health,” Associate Professor Abdel Shaheed said.

Co-author Professor David Hunter is a researcher at the Kolling Institute and Professor of Medicine at the University of Sydney. He said: “Women were twice as likely to develop the condition than men, and older age was only mildly associated with increased risk.”

Reducing the risk of knee osteoarthritis

Dr Duong, lead author and post-doctoral researcher at the Kolling Institute said: “Eliminating obesity and knee injuries combined could potentially reduce the risk of developing knee osteoarthritis by 14 percent across the population.

“We urge governments and the healthcare sector to take this seriously and to implement policy reforms that address occupational risks, subsidise knee injury prevention programs, and promote healthy eating and physical activity to reduce obesity.”

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Other The Conversation, Web page The Conversation article (Creative Commons licensed)
Journal/
conference:
Osteoarthritis and Cartilage
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: The University of Sydney
Funder: Dr Vicky Duong and Associate Professor Christina Abdel Shaheed received funding from Sydney Musculoskeletal Health, the University of Sydney to undertake this review. Associate Professor Abdel Shaheed is supported by a NHMRC Emerging Leadership 2 Fellowship. Professor David Hunter is supported by an NHMRC Investigator Grant Leadership 2 (#1194737). Professor Hunter provides consulting advice on scientific advisory boards for Pfizer, Lilly, TLCBio, Novartis.
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