American Journal of Epidemiology Vol. 127, No. 5: 1019-1030
Copyright © 1988 by The Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public Health
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SEX DIFFERENCES IN OSTEOARTHRITIS OF THE KNEE
THE ROLE OF OBESITY
1Department of Epidemiology and International Health, School of Medicine, University of California San Francisco, CA
2Department of Medicine, Bowman Gray School of Medicine, Wake Forest University Winston-Salem, NC
Reprint requests to Dr. Maradee A. Davis, Department of Epidemiology and International Health, HSW 1699, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94143-0560
This study investigated the role of obesity (body mass index, total body weight, triceps skinfold, subscapular skinfold) compared with other anthropometric variables (body fat distribution, muscularity, elbow breadth, bitrochanteric breadth) in order to explain previously noted sex differences in osteoarthritis of the knee. Anthropometric measures, self-reported symptoms, and knee x-ray data were analyzed for 3,905 adults aged 4574 years with valid x-ray data from the First National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 19711975. Prevalence of knee osteoarthritis was 4.9% in women and 2.6% in men. The relative risk for women compared with men increased from 1.57 at 4554 years to 2.14 at 6574 years. Adjusting for body mass index and subscapular and triceps skinfolds reduced the sex difference, whereas adjusting for total body weight, body fat distribution, muscularity, and skeletal size increased the sex difference. Body mass index was the variable that best reduced the sex difference when the other variables were included in the analysis; it did not, however, eliminate the sex difference. No sex differences were found in the strength of the association between anthropometric variables and osteoarthritis, nor was there evidence to suggest that obesity is a consequence of knee osteoarthritis rather than a risk factor.
adipose tissue; knee; osteoarthritis; sex characteristics
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