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PedAM

Pediatric Disease Annotations & Medicines




Disease osteoarthritis
Symptom C0028754|obesity
Sentences 20
PubMedID- 22353745 Objective: osteoarthritis (oa) is associated with obesity, although this relationship remains unclear.
PubMedID- 23479423 We will also cover the relationship between obesity and the development of knee osteoarthritis, postoperative care, and prosthetic outcomes.
PubMedID- 23326650 The older obese adults in this study had symptomatic knee osteoarthritis, consistent with obesity being a primary risk factor for knee osteoarthritis.
PubMedID- 25925369 Introduction: the mechanism by which obesity increases the risk of hip osteoarthritis is unclear.
PubMedID- 20373048 The patient’s co-morbitities included obesity with a bmi of 40 kg/m2, osteoarthritis, heart disease, hypertension, back pain, hypercholesterolemia, and depression.
PubMedID- 21331293 obesity is associated with osteoarthritis, obstructive sleep apnea, increased risk of cancer, and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease.
PubMedID- 22894173 No significant association of abdominal obesity with cvd or osteoarthritis was observed in either sex (table 3).
PubMedID- 23359399 obesity has been associated with osteoarthritis and increased morbidity and mortality.
PubMedID- 21927700 Many diseases, including diabetes, coronary artery disease, hypertension, breast cancer, colon cancer, and osteoarthritis, are associated with obesity .
PubMedID- 23266138 Background: obesity is associated with osteoarthritis and it is accompanied by chronic inflammation and elevated oxidative stress.
PubMedID- 22434455 The precise mechanism by which obesity leads to osteoarthritis remains unknown, but is likely to be due to a combination of mechanical, humoral and genetic factors.
PubMedID- 20604941 We focused on the incidence of knee osteoarthritis with dietary obesity since the knee joint is the primary joint affected by obesity in humans and significant spontaneous osteoarthritis of the knee occurs in mice.
PubMedID- 25362652 Objective: in adults, osteoarthritis (oa) is associated with obesity and knee alignment.
PubMedID- 22013527 Musculoskeletal pain, often in the form of osteoarthritis, is also associated with obesity and directly impacts the ability of older persons to remain mobile.
PubMedID- 25709495 In knee osteoarthritis (oa), people with class 2+ obesity have greater peak compressive knee forces than overweight people (2,293 n vs 2,182 n).49 this compression is accompanied by greater, although not significant, knee shear forces and patellofemoral forces acting at the knee.49 obese persons have been shown to have inadequate strength to control loading and maintain normal alignment of joints.
PubMedID- 22511797 obesity increased the risk of severe activity-limiting osteoarthritis, with an rr of 2.30 (95% ci 1.68 to 3.15) and 2.50 (95% ci 1.56 to 4.03) in women and men, respectively.
PubMedID- 24155808 There has been a strong association of obesity with osteoarthritis 3 and with obesity increasing worldwide this is likely to result in a disproportionately high number of obese and overweight patients seeking arthroplasty surgery.
PubMedID- 26069676 Purpose: osteoarthritis (oa) is associated with obesity in which altered fatty acid levels have been observed.
PubMedID- 25983577 Although obesity is associated with osteoarthritis, it is unclear whether body weight (bw) independently affects articular cartilage catabolism (i.e., independent from physiological factors that also accompany obesity).
PubMedID- 21676565 Association of obesity with osteoarthritis in elderly korean women.

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