Waterloo Region Record

Research comes to surprising conclusion about marathon runners and arthritis

- AMBY BURFOOT

A new study comes to the somewhat counterint­uitive conclusion that marathon runners have less arthritis than nonrunners. The study

Most people would assume that serious runners face a high risk for arthritis of the hip and knees. Yet prior research has generally failed to uncover such a connection. The most recent study, published in the Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, actually found that veteran American marathoner­s had only half as much arthritis as nonrunners. According to alarming new data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, arthritis now represents a $300 billion annual burden in the U.S.

Method and results Researcher­s from the orthopedic department at Philadelph­ia’s Thomas Jefferson University compared arthritis rates between 430 U.S. marathoner­s and a matched sample of nonrunners in the National Center for Health Statistics database.

The marathoner­s (average age 46, and 51 per cent women) had been running for an average of 19 years, logging 35 miles a week, and finishing 48 marathons. Despite this, they had an arthritis prevalence of 8.8 per cent vs. 17.9 per cent for nonrunners. Aging past 65 did increase the marathoner­s’ arthritis rate — to 24.5 per cent. But this was still roughly half the 49.6 per cent of nonrunners older than 65.

The team from Thomas Jefferson believes marathoner­s and other runners may gain arthritis protection from muscle developmen­t, body weight control, decreased levels of inflammato­ry agents and the well-known bone strengthen­ing that follows moderate-impact sports. Recommende­d action

If you’re running healthy, stay the course, advises Thomas Jefferson orthopedis­t Danielle Ponzio. If you’re thinking about beginning a running program but are concerned about arthritis, don’t worry. Just begin slowly and progress moderately. “Running is not harmful to healthy hips and knees,” Ponzio says. “In fact, it promotes joint and general health.” Those runners who do develop arthritis often get it after earlier injury or surgery, or from family genetics.

 ?? HAMILTON SPECTATOR FILE PHOTO ?? Researcher­s looked at the arthritis rate among runners and nonrunners and found runners had an arthritis prevalence of 8.8 per cent vs. 17.9 per cent for nonrunners.
HAMILTON SPECTATOR FILE PHOTO Researcher­s looked at the arthritis rate among runners and nonrunners and found runners had an arthritis prevalence of 8.8 per cent vs. 17.9 per cent for nonrunners.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada