Knee osteoarthritis risk in non-industrial societies undergoing an energy balance transition: evidence from the indigenous Tarahumara of Mexico.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_11F3E45D5046
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Title
Knee osteoarthritis risk in non-industrial societies undergoing an energy balance transition: evidence from the indigenous Tarahumara of Mexico.
Journal
Annals of the rheumatic diseases
Author(s)
Wallace I.J., Felson D.T., Worthington S., Duryea J., Clancy M., Aliabadi P., Eick G.N., Snodgrass J.J., Baggish A.L., Lieberman D.E.
ISSN
1468-2060 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0003-4967
Publication state
Published
Issued date
12/2019
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
78
Number
12
Pages
1693-1698
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article ; Multicenter Study ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Non-industrial societies with low energy balance levels are expected to be less vulnerable than industrial societies to diseases associated with obesity including knee osteoarthritis. However, as non-industrial societies undergo rapid lifestyle changes that promote positive energy balance, individuals whose metabolisms are adapted to energetic scarcity are encountering greater energy abundance, increasing their propensity to accumulate abdominal adipose tissue and thus potentially their sensitivity to obesity-related diseases.
Here, we propose that knee osteoarthritis is one such disease for which susceptibility is amplified by this energy balance transition.
Support for our hypothesis comes from comparisons of knee radiographs, knee pain and anthropometry among men aged ≥40 years in two populations: Tarahumara subsistence farmers in Mexico undergoing the energy balance transition and urban Americans from Framingham, Massachusetts.
We show that despite having markedly lower obesity levels than the Americans, the Tarahumara appear predisposed to accrue greater abdominal adiposity (ie, larger abdomens) for a given body weight, and are more vulnerable to radiographic and symptomatic knee osteoarthritis at lower levels of body mass index. Also, proportionate increases in abdomen size in the two groups are associated with greater increases in radiographic knee osteoarthritis risk among the Tarahumara than the Americans, implying that the abdominal adipose tissue of the Tarahumara is a more potent stimulus for knee degeneration.
Heightened vulnerability to knee osteoarthritis among non-industrial societies experiencing rapid lifestyle changes is a concern that warrants further investigation since such groups represent a large but understudied fraction of the global population.
Keywords
Adipose Tissue/metabolism, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Anthropometry, Body Mass Index, Energy Metabolism/physiology, Female, Humans, Indigenous Peoples, Life Style, Male, Mexico/epidemiology, Middle Aged, Obesity/complications, Obesity/ethnology, Obesity/metabolism, Osteoarthritis, Knee/ethnology, Osteoarthritis, Knee/etiology, Osteoarthritis, Knee/metabolism, Radiography, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, epidemiology, inflammation, knee osteoarthritis
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
07/12/2022 11:03
Last modification date
08/03/2025 7:21
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