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Sports injury, occupational physical activity joint laxity and meniscal damage

Sports injury, occupational physical activity joint laxity and meniscal damage
Sports injury, occupational physical activity joint laxity and meniscal damage
Objective. To investigate the risk factors for meniscal damage, an important determinant of knee osteoarthritis.
Methods. We studied 243 men and women aged 20-59 years in whom the diagnosis of a meniscal tear was confirmed for the first time at arthroscopy, over a 25 month period, in 2 British hospitals. Each case was compared with one or 2 community controls, matched by age and sex, who were registered with the same general practitioner. Information on exposure to risk factors was obtained by a structured questionnaire and physical examination.
Results. Meniscal tear was strongly associated with participation in sports during the 12 months preceding the onset of symptoms; the risk was particularly high for soccer (OR 3.7; 95% CI 2.1-6.6). Higher body mass index and occupational kneeling (OR 3.8; 95% CI 1.3-11.0) and squatting (OR 2.9; 95% CI 1.0-8.0) were associated with an increased risk of degenerative meniscal lesions, after adjustment for social class, joint laxity, and sports participation. Joint laxity was associated with degenerative meniscal lesions independently of occupational physical activity, sports, and obesity.
Conclusion. Our results confirm the importance of sporting activities entailing knee torsion in acute meniscal tear. They also point to a role for occupational activity, adiposity, and joint laxity in the pathogenesis of degenerative meniscal lesions. Modifying these mechanical risk factors may serve to reduce the risk of meniscal injury and may also help to prevent later knee osteoarthritis.
epidemiology, knee, osteoarthritis, meniscal tear, meniscectomy
0315-162X
557-563
Baker, P.
5428e0dd-69bb-4d52-b547-8944033d3044
Coggon, D.
2b43ce0a-cc61-4d86-b15d-794208ffa5d3
Reading, I.
6f832276-87b7-4a76-a9ed-b4b3df0a3f66
Barrett, D.S.
cbaaf354-cc75-42d4-980c-0a8797db5b4c
McLaren, M.
6834d2c6-7c6e-4d16-a4d9-ebd1bd35956f
Cooper, C.
e05f5612-b493-4273-9b71-9e0ce32bdad6
Baker, P.
5428e0dd-69bb-4d52-b547-8944033d3044
Coggon, D.
2b43ce0a-cc61-4d86-b15d-794208ffa5d3
Reading, I.
6f832276-87b7-4a76-a9ed-b4b3df0a3f66
Barrett, D.S.
cbaaf354-cc75-42d4-980c-0a8797db5b4c
McLaren, M.
6834d2c6-7c6e-4d16-a4d9-ebd1bd35956f
Cooper, C.
e05f5612-b493-4273-9b71-9e0ce32bdad6

Baker, P., Coggon, D., Reading, I., Barrett, D.S., McLaren, M. and Cooper, C. (2002) Sports injury, occupational physical activity joint laxity and meniscal damage. Journal of Rheumatology, 29 (3), 557-563.

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective. To investigate the risk factors for meniscal damage, an important determinant of knee osteoarthritis.
Methods. We studied 243 men and women aged 20-59 years in whom the diagnosis of a meniscal tear was confirmed for the first time at arthroscopy, over a 25 month period, in 2 British hospitals. Each case was compared with one or 2 community controls, matched by age and sex, who were registered with the same general practitioner. Information on exposure to risk factors was obtained by a structured questionnaire and physical examination.
Results. Meniscal tear was strongly associated with participation in sports during the 12 months preceding the onset of symptoms; the risk was particularly high for soccer (OR 3.7; 95% CI 2.1-6.6). Higher body mass index and occupational kneeling (OR 3.8; 95% CI 1.3-11.0) and squatting (OR 2.9; 95% CI 1.0-8.0) were associated with an increased risk of degenerative meniscal lesions, after adjustment for social class, joint laxity, and sports participation. Joint laxity was associated with degenerative meniscal lesions independently of occupational physical activity, sports, and obesity.
Conclusion. Our results confirm the importance of sporting activities entailing knee torsion in acute meniscal tear. They also point to a role for occupational activity, adiposity, and joint laxity in the pathogenesis of degenerative meniscal lesions. Modifying these mechanical risk factors may serve to reduce the risk of meniscal injury and may also help to prevent later knee osteoarthritis.

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Published date: 2002
Keywords: epidemiology, knee, osteoarthritis, meniscal tear, meniscectomy
Organisations: Community Clinical Sciences, Bioengineering Sciences, Dev Origins of Health & Disease

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 39166
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/39166
ISSN: 0315-162X
PURE UUID: cb00d9e0-f25f-4280-abde-4b245de232ad
ORCID for D. Coggon: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1930-3987
ORCID for I. Reading: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1457-6532
ORCID for C. Cooper: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3510-0709

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Date deposited: 21 Jun 2006
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 02:50

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Contributors

Author: P. Baker
Author: D. Coggon ORCID iD
Author: I. Reading ORCID iD
Author: D.S. Barrett
Author: M. McLaren
Author: C. Cooper ORCID iD

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