Newsweek

Knee Arthritis Becoming More Common for Unknown Reasons

The researchers don’t yet know the cause, but it likely involved fitness and diet.
Researchers studied the bones of ancient people to arrive at their findings that knee osteoarthritis has doubled in prevalence recently; you can see a light colored, polish-like patch toward the top of the image where the bones rubbed together.
knee-bones

New research shows that knee osteoarthritis, a painful and disabling condition in which cartilage wears down and bones rub against each other, has doubled in the last 50 years. This surprising spike raises serious questions about what causes the disease, and suggests it may be more preventable than previously thought.

The primary risk factors for the condition, which affects nearly one in five Americans over the age of 45, were August 14 in , suggests that the doubling in prevalence cannot be explained by these factors.  

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