2016
DOI: 10.1111/1756-185x.12895
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Body mass index and hand osteoarthritis susceptibility: an updated meta‐analysis

Abstract: Aim: Numerous epidemiologic studies have evaluated the association between overweight and hand osteoarthritis; However, the existing results are inconsistent.Methods: Systematic searches were performed and reference lists from the retrieved trials were searched. This meta-analysis and meta-regression was executed to identify all English-language articles that quantitatively assess the strength of associations between body mass index and hand osteoarthritis risk. Study-specific incremental estimates were standa… Show more

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Cited by 56 publications
(38 citation statements)
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“…Tendinopathy has also been linked with dietary fats, adiposity and inflammation [ 80 , 81 ], highlighting that obesity may not necessarily be only related to excessive load. Clearly elevated body fat is linked with structural changes and pain in multiple regions and may explain the known link between elevated BMI and osteoarthritis in non-weight-bearing joints such as the hands [ 15 ]. Future work to investigate if there is a true discordance between fat mass and fat-free mass may help strengthen the notion that body composition is more meaningful measure of risk for musculoskeletal pain.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Tendinopathy has also been linked with dietary fats, adiposity and inflammation [ 80 , 81 ], highlighting that obesity may not necessarily be only related to excessive load. Clearly elevated body fat is linked with structural changes and pain in multiple regions and may explain the known link between elevated BMI and osteoarthritis in non-weight-bearing joints such as the hands [ 15 ]. Future work to investigate if there is a true discordance between fat mass and fat-free mass may help strengthen the notion that body composition is more meaningful measure of risk for musculoskeletal pain.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The BMI is not a good measure of adiposity (body fatness) as it does not account for age or gender differences [ 13 ]. Furthermore, given the association between BMI-defined obesity and musculoskeletal pain extends to both weight-bearing [ 14 ] and non-weight-bearing joints [ 15 ], it follows that the mechanism underpinning this relationship may extend beyond excessive mechanical loading alone, which is implied with the BMI. Fat mass index (FMI) is a more relevant measure in having or predicting pain [ 16 ], suggesting the type of tissue is important.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Musculoskeletal pain has a bidirectional relationship with both obesity [ 11 ] and depression [ 12 ], while depression and obesity also amplify each other [ 13 ]. These relationships, however, are not limited to weight-bearing joints with a known association between elevated BMI and symptomatic hand osteoarthritis [ 14 ], suggesting that metabolic mechanisms, including systemic inflammation [ 15 ], may underpin the relationship between obesity and joint pain [ 16 ]. Whilst these relationships exist in the general population, it is particularly pertinent in bariatric surgery candidates, who are over-represented amongst those complaining of musculoskeletal pain [ 17 ]; with foot and ankle pain prevalence cited as 34–50% [ 18 , 19 ].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…L'obésité est un facteur de risque important d'arthrose, surtout de gonarthrose, mais aussi de coxarthrose et, dans une moindre mesure d'arthrose des mains [4,5]. L'association non fortuite entre obésité et maladies métaboliques intégrée au sein du syndrome métabolique a conduit à la recherche d'association entre le syndrome métabolique et l'arthrose.…”
Section: Données éPidémiologiques Supportant Le Concept D'arthrose Asunclassified