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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: osteoarthritis + worsens + smoking  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)


BBC News
5-LOXIN(R) Proven to Reduce the Symptoms of Osteoarthritis in New ...
MarketWatch - Aug 1, 2008
According to the authors, "In this study, the compound was shown to have no major adverse effects in our osteoarthritis patients. ...
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Frankincense Provides Relief for Osteoarthritis Washington Post
Frankincense may Alleviate Osteoarthritis Symptoms, Study Reveals MedIndia
Xinhua - HealthNews
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ConforMIS, Inc. Launches First Patient-Specific, Bicompartmental ...
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Orthokine Treatment Is Effective For Knee Arthritis, Even After ...
Medical News Today (press release), UK -
The results of a two-year representative study of osteoarthritis of the knee, published in the internationally renowned journal "Osteoarthritis and ...
ACC told to keep paying fireman
Northern Advocate, New Zealand -
In making the decision, the service acted on the opinions of two orthopaedic surgeons that osteoarthritis was present in Mr Hanmore's knee before the injury ...
Reuters Health News Summary
San Diego Union Tribune, United States - Aug 2, 2008
In a study of nearly 7600 Spanish adults age 60 and older, researchers found that 7 percent had hip osteoarthritis, while 12 percent had osteoarthritis of ...
Healthcare Leaders Focus on Patient-Centered Care at Annual ...
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Obese Patients With Knee Osteoarthritis Benefit From Knee ...
RMGH Health News, CA - Aug 1, 2008
After total knee arthroplasty (TKA) for osteoarthritis of the knee, obese patients fare nearly as well as their normal-weight peers, a British research team ...

The Money Times
Cartilage That Repairs Itself? New Research Reveals Important Clues
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Natural cartilage repair in mice studied United Press International
Mice genes could hold key to alcoholism cure kgw.com (subscription)
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NHS Choices
Frankincense for osteoarthritis
NHS Choices, UK - Jul 30, 2008
Capsules of frankincense extract were found to relieve symptoms of osteoarthritis within a week, and by three months stiffness and pain had reduced by up to ...
Frankincense, a wise man's remedy for arthritis Daily Mail
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Clinical effects of Garcinia kola in knee osteoarthritis
7thSpace Interactive (press release), NY - Jul 30, 2008
Over the past years, there has been a growing number of knee osteoarthritis (KOA) patients who are not willing to comply with long-term non-steroidal ...
Source: Google News

Estrogen Replacement Therapy and the Development of Osteoarthritis. -
SA Oliveria, DT Felson, RA Klein, JI Reed, AM … - Epidemiology, 1996 - JSTOR
... Menopausal status, menopausal type, and smoking status were ... leading to a clinical
diagnosis of osteoarthritis. ... triggers symptom onset and worsens symptoms in ...

Osteoarthritis: current concepts in diagnosis and management -
NJ Manek, NE Lane - Am Fam Physician, 2000 - aafp.org
... Pain typically worsens with use of the affected ... in a substantial number of patients
with osteoarthritis. ... risk factors Female gender Smoking Alcohol consumption ...

Medical management of osteoarthritis -
NJ Manek - Mayo Clin Proc, 2001 - mayoclinicproceedings.com
... Typically, the pain worsens with weight bearing and activity and ... Data from American
College of Rheumatology Subcommittee on Osteoarthritis Guidelines. ... Smoking. ...
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[BOOK] All About Osteoarthritis: The Definitive Resource for Arthritis Patients and Their Families
NE Lane, DJ Wallace - 2002 - books.google.com
... Page 2. All About Osteoarthritis afflicts about 25 million people ... cut down on
visits to the doctor. In All About Osteoarthritis, two leading ...

Article Search
TL Petty, S Cessation - hmpcommunications.com
... medical history includes hypertension, osteoarthritis, and gastroesophageal ... disease
and generally worsens with age ... States, mainly due to smoking, COPD incidence ...

Treatment of Osteoarthritis. Featured CME Topic -
EVMD Barnes, NL Edwards - Southern Medical Journal, 2005 - smajournalonline.org
... If walking or jogging worsens symptoms, the patient ... symptomatic relief for most patients
with osteoarthritis. ... of comorbid conditions, and smoking and alcohol. ...

… with a fall do not receive Guideline care and their fall risk profile worsens significantly: a 6- … -
AE Salter, KM Khan, MG Donaldson, JC Davis, J … - Osteoporosis International, 2006 - Springer
... risk profile worsens significantly: a 6-month prospective ... and 27 (50%) had various
degrees of osteoarthritis. ... within 2 years) (%) 48(88.9%) Smoking (pack years ...

Environmental vascular risk factors: New perspectives for stroke prevention -
O Bernal-Pacheco, GC Rom?n - Journal of the Neurological Sciences, 2007 - Elsevier
... Smokers have worse cognitive performances than non ... gender, education, BMI, smoking,
diabetes, systolic ... as well as for diabetes, osteoarthritis, and endometrial ...

Managing Osteoarthritis: Focusing on COX-2-Specific Inhibitors -
O OA - uspharmacist.com
... 2. Nonpharmacologic Therapy for Patients With Osteoarthritis. ... motion, and joint
stiffness worsen symptoms of OA. ... conditions, and, possibly, smoking and alcohol ...

An update on the science and therapy of obesity and its relationship to osteoarthritis -
J Korner, MA Eberle - Current Rheumatology Reports, 2001 - Springer
... After controlling for estrogen use, smoking, height, and ... 1 (IL-1) is elevated in
osteoarthritis and leads ... mass continues to decrease, and disability worsens. ...

Source: Google Scholar
 

Smoking worsens knee osteoarthritis

ROCHESTER, Minn. -- New findings from a study led by a Mayo Clinic rheumatologist indicate that men with knee osteoarthritis who smoke experience greater cartilage loss and more severe pain than men who do not smoke. Results will be published online this week in the Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases.

Knee osteoarthritis is one of the leading causes of disability in elders.

“This is a novel finding,” says Shreyasee Amin, M.D., Mayo Clinic rheumatologist and lead study researcher. “Previous studies showed no association between cigarette smoking and knee osteoarthritis or even a protective effect of smoking.”

The finding that cigarette smoking plays a role in the worsening of knee osteoarthritis is important, says Dr. Amin, as it is a potentially modifiable risk factor.

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

The Human Knee

Caption: AP Lateral Knee

Credit: Mayo Clinic Foundation for Medical Education and Research

Usage Restrictions: None

 

To conduct this study, the researchers examined 159 men with symptomatic knee osteoarthritis who participated in a prospective study on the natural history of the condition, the Boston Osteoarthritis of the Knee Study. The current study focused on men, as there were too few women in the original group studied who smoked (4 percent). The researchers took MRIs (magnetic resonance images) of the more symptomatic knee of each patient at the study beginning, and also 15 and 30 months later. Cartilage loss over follow-up, based on knee MRIs, was determined at the tibiofemoral joint (the connection between the thighbone and shinbone) and the patellofemoral joint (the junction of the knee cap and the thigh bone) in the knees, and a scoring tool was used to assess knee pain severity. Nineteen, or 12 percent, of the men were current smokers at the study’s start. These men also were leaner and younger than other study participants, so the researchers adjusted for these factors. The investigators found current smokers had a 2.3 fold increased risk of cartilage loss at the medial tibiofemoral joint and a 2.5 fold increased risk of cartilage loss at the patellofemoral joint compared to the men who had quit smoking or never smoked. Current smokers also had higher pain scores than men who were not current smokers, at the beginning of the study (60.5 vs. 45.0, with 100 as the highest possible pain score) and at follow up (59.4 vs. 44.3).

The association between smoking and cartilage loss in knee osteoarthritis could be explained by one or more of the following theories, according to the researchers:

  • Smoking may disorder the cells and inhibit cell proliferation in the knee cartilage
  • Smoking may increase oxidant stress, which contributes to cartilage loss
  • Smoking may raise carbon monoxide levels in arterial blood, contributing to tissue hypoxia (insufficient blood oxygenation), which could impair cartilage repair

Dr. Amin and colleagues believe that the increased pain experienced by smokers with knee osteoarthritis may not be due to the effect of smoking on cartilage loss, as cartilage does not have pain fibers. They have several theories for the link:

  • Smoking may affect other knee joint structures mediating knee pain
  • Smoking may affect one’s pain threshold for knee or other musculoskeletal pain

Dr. Amin says these findings are provocative and deserve further study, especially given the number of potential ways in which cigarette smoking could have a negative effect on knee joint cartilage.

Osteoarthritis, sometimes called degenerative joint disease or osteoarthrosis, is the most common form of arthritis. Osteoarthritis is characterized by the breakdown of joint cartilage and may affect any bodily joint, including those in the fingers, hips, knees, lower back and feet, though weight-bearing joints such as the knees are most susceptible. As cartilage slowly deteriorates over the years, chronic pain or varying amounts of discomfort can arise when standing and walking, and swelling also may occur with knee osteoarthritis. Over time, the cartilage deteriorates, and its smooth surface roughens. Eventually, if the cartilage wears down completely, bone may rub on bone, causing the ends of the bones to become damaged and the joints to become more painful. There is no known cause or cure for osteoarthritis, but available treatments can relieve pain and help patients remain active.

###

This study was funded by an Osteoarthritis Biomarkers Grant from the Arthritis Foundation, National Institutes of Health Grant AR47785 and a grant from Bayer Corporation. Study authors, in addition to Dr. Amin, include Jingbo Niu, M.D.; David Hunter, M.B.B.S., Ph.D.; Margaret Clancy; Michael LaValley, Ph.D.; and David Felson, M.D.; all from Boston University School of Medicine. Study authors from University of California at San Francisco include Ali Guermazi, M.D.; Mikayel Grigoryan, M.D.; and Harry Genant, M.D.

 
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