Call to action needed for knee joint health: Monash
Preventing weight gain from young adulthood to late midlife could reduce knee replacements by almost 30%, enabling the health system to achieve annual savings of $373 million, according to a new study by Monash University.
Using data from 24,368 participants in the Melbourne Collaborative Cohort Study, the researchers examined links between weight gain patterns and the risk of total knee replacement for osteoarthritis.
While weight loss was recommended for people with osteoarthritis who were overweight or obese, this was often too little too late, said senior author and Monash University Professor Flavia Cicuttini, who also heads the School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine’s Musculoskeletal Epidemiology Unit.
“Focusing on prevention, with small average long-term changes in energy balance, can make a big difference. Reducing your caloric intake just slightly each day builds up to avoiding 8–12 kg of weight gain over a couple of decades, saving money and avoiding surgery. This also has cardiac health benefits,” Cicuttini said.
“For example, eating the average equivalent of two fewer pieces of chocolate per week, or adding 10 minutes of exercise, can prevent the insidious half to 0.5–1 kg weight gain we see per person per year in Australia. This can result in tangible health gains, improving lives and saving money.”
Professor Cicuttini said a “call to action” was needed for knee joint health. “We also need to be sending out the message that it is important to make sure that people don’t continue to gain more weight,” she said.
“Although recommendations to lose weight are important if a person is carrying excess weight, this can be difficult to achieve for most people.
“Too often we see people with knee pain, advise them to lose weight, only for them to return five years later having gained a further 3–5 kg. This is a missed opportunity because it is easier to prevent further weight gain than it is to lose it.
“We need to focus on preventing or slowing weight gain when people first present with any knee pain, even niggling knee pain. Australians tend to gain about 0.5–1 kg per year over adult life. This slow, steady accumulation of weight adds up, resulting in the obesity we see.”
Professor Cicuttini said that assuming we can ‘fix’ obesity after it has occurred is not very effective and prevention has multiple health and cost benefits.
“If an approach doesn’t work, why don’t we change it?” she said.
“If adults can be encouraged to consider preventing the slow creep in weight from a young age, this will have multiple health benefits including reducing the need for a knee replacement in the future.”
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