| Literature DB >> 28767924 |
Isabelle Ferreira da Silva Souza1, Rosa Sá de Oliveira Neta1, Juliana Maria Gazzola2, Marcelo Cardoso de Souza1.
Abstract
To review scientific literature to assess nutritional status of elderly patients with osteoarthritis in the last 16 years. This is an integrative literature review that included articles published in national and international journals indexed in PubMed, SciELO and BIREME. We selected 14 articles, and English language was predominant. The year of publication of articles ranged from 2006 to 2016, and most of papers were cross-sectional studies. To gather papers and for posterior evaluate, we used a validated data collection instrument and the included studies were critical analyzed by reading, gathering and analysis of articles. Studies suggested that there is a positive correlation between obesity and knee osteoarthritis. Obesity is one of the most important modifiable factors in worsening of osteoarthritis symptoms. RESUMO O objetivo da pesquisa foi revisar a produção científica referente à avaliação do estado nutricional de idosos com osteoartrite nos últimos 16 anos. Assim, o estudo foi uma revisão integrativa da literatura, realizada com a busca de artigos publicados em periódicos nacionais e internacionais indexados no PubMed, na SciELO e na BIREME. Foram selecionados 14 artigos, e o idioma inglês foi preponderante. O período de publicação dos artigos variou de 2006 a 2016, com predominância de estudos do tipo transversais. Para reunir os artigos e para posterior avaliação, foi utilizado um instrumento de coleta de dados validado, e as análises críticas dos estudos incluídos foram realizadas por meio da leitura, do agrupamento e da análise dos artigos. As pesquisas sugeriram que existe correlação positiva entre obesidade e osteoartrite de joelhos. Além disto, a obesidade é um dos fatores mais significativos e modificáveis no agravamento dos sintomas da osteoartrite.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28767924 PMCID: PMC5609622 DOI: 10.1590/S1679-45082017RW3834
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Einstein (Sao Paulo) ISSN: 1679-4508
Figure 1Flowchart of paper identification and selection for integrative review on osteoarthritis and nutritional assessment of elderlies between 2000 and 2016
Abstracts on osteoarthritis and nutritional assessment of elderlies between 2000 and 2016
| Author | Objective of the study | Type of the study | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vasconcelos et al.(13) | To examine the influence of pain intensity, radiographic severity, obesity level and symptom duration on the functional capacity of obese individuals with knee OA | Cross-sectional | Pain intensity is a factor that influences functional activity performance among obese individuals with knee OA. In addition, clinically and radiographically, sample had moderate affection of knee OA |
| Vasconcelos et al.(14) | To compare the impact of the degree of obesity in symptoms and functional capacity of women with knee OA | Case-control | The degree of obesity had no impact on knee OA symptoms of pain, stiffness and functional difficulty in both obese women and women with morbid obesity |
| Chacur et al.(15) | To assess the correlations between body mass index, Waist circumference and Waist/Hip Circumference Ratio with Knee OA and observed association of these anthropometrical variables with severity of knee OA | Cross-sectional | Severity of OA was positive correlated with BMI and waist circumpherence |
| Rosis et al.(16) | To evaluate most and least affected joints, age patterns, sex, comorbidities and BMI, as well as its associations with appearance and development of OA in elderlies living long-term care institution | Cross-sectional | The high occurrence of OA in the population was related with advanced age, excessive weight and comorbidities that worsen the disease |
| Aurichio et al.(17) | To determine prevalence of obesity and its association in old population living in the city of São Carlos (SP, Brazil) | Cross-sectional | An association was found between the obese and presence of diabetes. In addition, women were more obese, reported joint pain and excessive body weight |
| Chacur et al.(18) | To determine possible correlations between anthropometric features, Q angle and knee OA in obese women | Cross-sectional | Abdominal obese, its degree and duration possibly contribute to incidence of knee OA in obese women |
| Christensen et al.(19) | To assess changes in micronutrient status (vitamin D, ferritin, and vitamin B12) and body composition in obese individuals after a dietary weight loss program | Prospective cohort | Weight loss can be successfully achieve in OA patients, especially if the diet includes enough nutrientes, therefore increasing bone mineral density and levels of vitamin D ande B12 |
| Elbaz et al.(20) | To examine the associations of sex, body mass index, and age with knee OA symptomatic severity | Cross-sectional | Higher BMI correlated significantly with worse in knee OA symptoms |
| Qin et al.(21) | To examine the cross-sectional association between dietary magnesium intake and the radiographic knee OA among African-American and Caucasian men and women | Cross-sectional | Magnesium intake in the diet was inversely proportional to presence of knee OA in Caucasians but not in African Americans |
| Fahlman et al.(22) | To observe old individuals without OA at age 78, describing their height, weight and body mass index | Cross-sectional | Higher BMI is recognized as a risk factor for knee OA. Elderlies aged 78 years who were overweight did not have knee OA. A possible explanation may be an “inflated” BMI based on decrease in height, not just increase in weight |
| Holla et al.(23) | To assess whether BMI and depressed mood are independently associated with knee pain and activity limitations; and to compare the relative contributions of BMI and depressed mood to knee pain and activity limitations | Cross-sectional | In patients with knee OA, the BMI and depressed mood were positively and independently associated with knee pain and activity limitations |
| Lee et al.(24) | To examine the risk factors for OA and the contributing factors to current arthritic pain in older adults | Cross-sectional | Age, female gender, higher body mass index, and osteoporosis were significant risk factors for OA, while higher education level was a protective factor for OA |
| Weiss(25) | To determine whether BMI increases knee pain in individuals without severe knee OA | Cross-sectional | Weight loss may reduce knee OA pain even if the osteological symptoms are not treated |
| Ho-Phan et al.(26) | To investigate whether the association between BMI and OA is mediated by fat mass or lean mass | Cross-sectional | The association between body mass index and OA is mainly mediated by fat mass |
| Reyes et al.(27) | To analyze the effect of being overweight or obese on the incidence of routinely diagnosed knee, hip, and hand OA | Prospective cohort | Being overweight or obese increases the risk of hand, hip, and knee OA, with the greatest risk in the knee, and this occurs on response of increasing BMI |
OA: osteoarthritis; BMI: body mass index.