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    J Occup Med Toxicol. 2008 Jul 14;3:14.

    The role of cumulative physical work load in symptomatic knee osteoarthritis - a case-control study in Germany.

    Source

    Federal Institute of Occupational Safety and Health, Berlin, Germany. seidler.andreas@baua.bund.de.

    Abstract

    ABSTRACT:

    OBJECTIVES:

    To examine the dose-response relationship between cumulative exposure to kneeling and squatting as well as to lifting and carrying of loads and symptomatic knee osteoarthritis (OA) in a population-based case-control study.

    METHODS:

    In five orthopedic clinics and five practices we recruited 295 male patients aged 25 to 70 with radiographically confirmed knee osteoarthritis associated with chronic complaints. A total of 327 male control subjects were recruited. Data were gathered in a structured personal interview. To calculate cumulative exposure, the self-reported duration of kneeling and squatting as well as the duration of lifting and carrying of loads were summed up over the entire working life.

    RESULTS:

    The results of our study support a dose-response relationship between kneeling/squatting and symptomatic knee osteoarthritis. For a cumulative exposure to kneeling and squatting > 10.800 hours, the risk of having radiographically confirmed knee osteoarthritis as measured by the odds ratio (adjusted for age, region, weight, jogging/athletics, and lifting or carrying of loads) is 2.4 (95% CI 1.1-5.0) compared to unexposed subjects. Lifting and carrying of loads is significantly associated with knee osteoarthritis independent of kneeling or similar activities.

    CONCLUSION:

    As the knee osteoarthritis risk is strongly elevated in occupations that involve both kneeling/squatting and heavy lifting/carrying, preventive efforts should particularly focus on these "high-risk occupations".

    PMID:
    18625053
    [PubMed]
    PMCID:
    PMC2491615
    Free PMC Article

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