Work intensity and fat mass percentage are associated with asymptomatic morphometric vertebral fractures in knee osteoarthritis patients: A cross-sectional study
Izzatul Nadiah Zolkiply, Kah Keng Wong, Hakimah Mohammad Sallehudin, Mohammad Zulkarnain Bidin, Fahrudin Che Hamzah, Norafida Bahari, Wan Syamimee Wan Ghazali, Zhifeng Yu, Zhifeng Yu, Zhifeng Yu

TL;DR
This study finds that work intensity and body fat are linked to silent spinal fractures in knee osteoarthritis patients.
Contribution
The study identifies occupation and fat mass percentage as novel predictors of asymptomatic vertebral fractures in knee osteoarthritis patients.
Findings
Heavy or moderate work is strongly associated with asymptomatic morphometric vertebral fractures.
Higher fat mass percentage is linked to lower incidence of these fractures.
Diabetes is also significantly associated with asymptomatic vertebral fractures in knee OA patients.
Abstract
Knee osteoarthritis (OA) is a common condition with a prevalence of 365 million individuals globally, and it is an independent risk factor for falls and fractures, notably asymptomatic morphometric vertebral fractures (AMVF). The high prevalence of knee OA, the severity of AMVF, and their combined impacts on quality of life underscore the need for early detection, appropriate treatment and management. To address this, our cross-sectional study aims to identify potential predictive factors associated with AMVF in knee OA patients. Our cohort consisted of 76 patients diagnosed with knee OA, predominantly female (84.2%), of Malay ethnicity (84.2%), and obese (55.3%). In univariable analysis, significant association was found between occupation (moderate or heavy work) and AMVF (p<0.001). Diabetes mellitus comorbidity (p = 0.016) and fat mass percentage (p = 0.027) also demonstrated a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBone and Joint Diseases · Bone health and osteoporosis research · Spondyloarthritis Studies and Treatments
