Article
The more joint pains present throughout the body, the more knee pain increases.
Patients with osteoarthritis (OA) of the knee who also have pain in other joints are more likely to experience greater knee pain, according to a new study in Arthritis Care & Research.
The study found that pain in the lower back as well as foot pain and elbow pain on the same side as the affected knee were specifically associated with more severe knee pain.
Knee OA is the leading cause of disability in the US. Nearly 4.3 million adults age 60 and older have the symptomatic form of the disease, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). A study by Helmick et al published in Arthritis & Rheumatism reported 59 million people have low back pain, which is the most common cause of lost work time among individuals less than 45 years of age and the third most common cause among those ages 45 to 65.
The current study team led by Pradeep Suri, MD, from Harvard Medical School, New England Baptist Hospital, and Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts used data provided by individuals from the Osteoarthritis Initiative. The initiative is a multicenter population-based observational cohort study of knee OA. A subgroup of 1,389 participants, ages 45 to 79 years, who had symptomatic knee OA in at least one knee were included, with patients also asked to identify pain in the lower back, neck, shoulder, elbow, wrist, hand, hip, knee, ankle, or foot. Researchers used the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC) to measure the level of pain of patients in the study on a scale of 0 to 20 with lower scores representing less pain and stiffness.
Results indicate that 57.4% of participants reported having pain in their lower back. Participants with low back pain had a mean WOMAC pain score of 6.5, while those without pain in their lower back scored 5.2. Researchers found that low back pain was significantly associated with an increase in the WOMAC knee pain score, with similar associations demonstrated in all other individual joint locations that were studied. Those models analyzing pain locations simultaneously show only low back pain, and ipsilateral foot pain and elbow pain were significantly associated with a higher knee pain score.
Additionally, researchers determined that having more than one pain location, regardless of the site, was associated with greater WOMAC knee pain score. In participants with four or five pain locations the severity of knee pain was even higher.
“Our findings show that pain in the low back, foot and elbow may be associated with greater knee pain, confirming that symptomatic knee OA rarely occurs in isolation. Future studies are needed to determine whether treatment of pain occurring elsewhere in the body will improve therapy outcomes for knee OA," Dr. Suri concluded, according to a press release.
Source: Wiley-Blackwell
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