Hunter David J, Zhang Yuqing, Nevitt Michael C, Xu Ling, Niu Jingbo, Lui Li-Yung, Yu Wei, Aliabadi Piran, Felson David T
Boston University Arthritis Center, BU School of Medicine, 715 Albany Street, Boston, MA 02118, USA.
Arthritis Rheum. 2004 May;50(5):1495-500. doi: 10.1002/art.20145.
Several investigators have speculated that mechanical stress might play an important role in the development of hand osteoarthritis (OA). Chopsticks, used universally as eating utensils in China, increase joint loading in the first through third fingers. We conducted a population-based survey among elderly Chinese individuals living in Beijing, to explore whether chopsticks use is associated with prevalent hand OA.
We recruited a sample of persons ages 60 years and older, using door-to-door enumeration in randomly selected neighborhoods in Beijing. Subjects answered questions about the hand with which they use chopsticks, handedness, and pincer grip activities. Bilateral posteroanterior hand radiographs were obtained, and each joint was graded according to the Kellgren/Lawrence (K/L) scale. We defined a subject as having radiographic OA if at least 1 of his or her hand joints had radiographic OA (K/L score of > or =2). We defined a particular hand group (i.e., distal interphalangeal [DIP] joints, proximal interphalangeal [PIP] joints, or metacarpophalangeal [MCP] joints) as having OA if at least 1 joint of the group had radiographic OA. We calculated the prevalence of OA for each hand joint and, according to the status of chopsticks use, performed a matched analysis to examine the relationship between chopsticks use and the prevalence of hand OA. In the analysis, we excluded persons who reported a previous hand injury. Because most subjects used chopsticks with their dominant hand (a hand they would be expected to use more for all manual tasks), we also performed the analysis among subjects who reported that they had no hand preference when performing other activities and subjects who denied other pincer grip activities.
A total of 1,008 men and 1,499 women were assessed. The prevalence ratio for OA of the thumb IP joint in the chopsticks hand was 1.2 (range 1.1-1.4) in men and 1.6 (range 1.4-1.7) in women; the prevalence ratio for OA of the second and third PIP joints was 1.5 (range 1.1-2.2) in men and 1.4 (range 1.2-1.7) in women; and the prevalence ratio for OA of the second and third MCP joints was 1.4 (range 1.2-1.6) in men and 1.4 (range 1.2-1.6) in women. The prevalence ratios in these joints were greater than the ratios in other MCP, PIP, or DIP joints from the same hand that were unlikely to be involved by chopsticks use, especially among women. Similar results were observed when the analyses were limited to ambidextrous subjects and subjects who did not engage in any other pincer grip activities. Thumb IP joint OA affected 26% of the entire population studied, and chopsticks use accounted for 19% of the risk of OA developing in this joint in men and 36% of the risk in women.
This epidemiologic study investigated the relationship of chopsticks use to hand arthropathy. The results suggest that chopsticks use is associated with an increased prevalence of OA in the IP joint of the thumb, and in the second and third PIP and MCP joints.
一些研究人员推测,机械应力可能在手部骨关节炎(OA)的发展中起重要作用。在中国普遍用作餐具的筷子,会增加示指至中指的关节负荷。我们对居住在北京的老年中国人进行了一项基于人群的调查,以探讨使用筷子是否与手部OA的患病率有关。
我们在北京随机选择的社区中采用逐户普查的方式,招募了60岁及以上的人群样本。受试者回答了关于他们使用筷子的手、利手和捏取活动的问题。获取了双手的后前位X线片,并根据Kellgren/Lawrence(K/L)分级标准对每个关节进行分级。如果受试者至少有一个手部关节有影像学OA(K/L评分≥2),则将其定义为有影像学OA。如果特定手部组(即远侧指间关节[DIP]、近侧指间关节[PIP]或掌指关节[MCP])中至少有一个关节有影像学OA,则将该组定义为有OA。我们计算了每个手部关节的OA患病率,并根据使用筷子的情况,进行配对分析以研究使用筷子与手部OA患病率之间的关系。在分析中,我们排除了报告有既往手部损伤的人。由于大多数受试者用优势手使用筷子(人们预期他们在所有手动任务中会更多地使用这只手),我们还对报告在进行其他活动时没有手偏好的受试者以及否认进行其他捏取活动的受试者进行了分析。
共评估了1008名男性和1499名女性。使用筷子的手的拇指指间关节OA的患病率比值在男性中为1.2(范围1.1 - 1.4),在女性中为1.6(范围1.4 - 1.7);第二和第三近侧指间关节OA的患病率比值在男性中为1.5(范围1.1 - 2.2),在女性中为1.4(范围1.2 - 1.7);第二和第三掌指关节OA的患病率比值在男性中为1.4(范围1.2 - 1.6),在女性中为1.4(范围1.2 - 1.6)。这些关节的患病率比值高于同一手的其他掌指关节、近侧指间关节或远侧指间关节的比值,这些关节不太可能因使用筷子而受累,尤其是在女性中。当分析仅限于双手灵巧的受试者和不进行任何其他捏取活动的受试者时,观察到了类似的结果。拇指指间关节OA影响了所研究的全部人群的26%,使用筷子占该关节男性OA发病风险的19%,女性发病风险的36%。
这项流行病学研究调查了使用筷子与手部关节病之间的关系。结果表明,使用筷子与拇指指间关节、第二和第三近侧指间关节以及掌指关节OA患病率的增加有关。