Literature DB >> 21724707

Association of baseline knee bone size, cartilage volume, and body mass index with knee cartilage loss over time: a longitudinal study in younger or middle-aged adults.

Benny Antony1, Changhai Ding, Oliver Stannus, Flavia Cicuttini, Graeme Jones.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine the association of knee bone size, cartilage volume, and body mass index (BMI) at baseline with knee cartilage loss over 2 years in younger or middle-aged adults.
METHODS: A total of 324 subjects (mean age 45 yrs, range 26-61) were measured at baseline and about 2 years later. Knee cartilage volume and bone size were determined using T1-weighted fat-saturated magnetic resonance imaging.
RESULTS: In multivariable analysis, baseline knee bone size was negatively associated with annual change in knee cartilage volume at medial and lateral tibial sites (ß = -0.62% to -0.47%/cm(2), all p < 0.001). The associations disappeared at medial tibial site after adjustment for baseline cartilage volume and became of borderline statistical significance at lateral tibial site after adjustment for both baseline cartilage volume and osteophytes (ß = -0.29, p = 0.059). Baseline knee cartilage volume was consistently and negatively associated with annual change in knee cartilage volume at all 3 medial tibial, lateral tibial, and patellar sites (ß = -4.41% to -1.37%/ml, all p < 0.001). Baseline BMI was negatively associated with an annual change in knee cartilage volume, but only in subjects within the upper tertile of baseline cartilage volume, even after adjusting for cartilage defects (ß = -0.16% to -0.34%/kg/m(2), all p < 0.05).
CONCLUSION: Our study suggests that both higher baseline tibial bone area and knee cartilage volume (most likely due to cartilage swelling) are associated with greater knee cartilage loss over 2 years. A higher BMI was associated with greater knee cartilage loss only in subjects with higher baseline cartilage volume.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21724707     DOI: 10.3899/jrheum.101309

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Rheumatol        ISSN: 0315-162X            Impact factor:   4.666


  13 in total

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2.  Cartilage signal intensity on T1-weighted MRI: association with risk factors and measures of knee osteoarthritis.

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5.  Prediction of medial tibiofemoral compartment joint space loss progression using volumetric cartilage measurements: Data from the FNIH OA biomarkers consortium.

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6.  Viscoelastic properties of bovine knee joint articular cartilage: dependency on thickness and loading frequency.

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7.  Structural associations of symptomatic knee osteoarthritis.

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Review 9.  Wolff's law in action: a mechanism for early knee osteoarthritis.

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10.  Structural changes of hip osteoarthritis using magnetic resonance imaging.

Authors:  Andrew J Teichtahl; Yuanyuan Wang; Sam Smith; Anita E Wluka; Graham G Giles; Kim L Bennell; Richard O'Sullivan; Flavia M Cicuttini
Journal:  Arthritis Res Ther       Date:  2014-10-11       Impact factor: 5.156

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