Irish Daily Mail

Modern humans have grown an extra bone!

...and it could be giving us arthritic knees

- By Victoria Allen news@dailymail.ie

EVERY schoolchil­d knows the human skeleton has 206 bones.

But the textbooks may need to be rewritten – after a bone scientists thought had been lost to evolution has made a curious comeback.

The fabella, a tiny bone that sits inside the tendon behind the knee, is more than three times as prevalent as 100 years ago – and now two in five of us have one.

Less than half an inch in diameter, the bone – which was found in our primate ancestors – has been dubbed the ‘appendix of the skeleton’ because it is apparently pointless. Now scientists believe modern diets, which have made us taller and heavier, have placed more strain on our knees – leading us to grow the extra bone to relieve the pressure.

But there’s a catch. Having a fifth bone in the knee could wear away important cartilage, damage that can cause osteoarthr­itis. In fact, sufferers of the painful condition are twice as likely to have a fabella.

Some experts now say the fabella should be routinely removed if it is found. Researcher­s from Imperial College London reviewed more than 21,000 scientific studies performed over 150 years, in which the fabella bone was identified in scans and dissection­s.

They found 11.2% of the world’s population had a fabella in 1918. However, by last year this figure had more than tripled to 39%, according to the review pubwell

‘No idea what it does’

lished in the Journal of Anatomy.

Study lead Dr Michael Berthaume said: ‘This research is so exciting because it is extremely rare to have a change to the human skeleton which affects everyone around the world.

‘We have no idea and can only guess at what it does, so it could turn out to be the appendix of the human skeleton.

‘We hope that by studying it we can help people struggling with the pain of osteoarthr­itis, and figure out if people with fabellas should have them removed.’

The fabella, which is Latin for ‘little bean’, seems to have no evolutiona­ry reason to exist and was believed to have died out with our primate ancestors before it reappeared in medical reports in 1875. People are taller and heavier than in the past, so have a larger gastrocnem­ius muscle behind the knee which creates stress and friction.

The fabella, which is found in the tendon attaching the muscle to the thigh bone, may remove some of this stress by providing a smooth surface for the tendon to slide across. This is certainly the advantage it has in dogs, cats and some monkeys, which all have the extra bone.

But experts believe the fabella may create uneven force on the knee, increasing damage to the cartilage. It could also cause pain after knee replacemen­t surgery, as the extra bone stays in place by burrowing into the thigh bone. When that part of the bone is replaced and there is no longer a depression to hold it, the tendon ‘snaps’ from left to right with every stride, causing pain.

Dr Berthaume said: ‘As we evolved into great apes and humans, we appear to have lost the need for the fabella.

‘Now, it seems to just cause us problems – but the interestin­g question is why it’s making such a comeback.’

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