Presence of Magnetic Resonance Imaging-Defined Inflammation Particularly in Overweight and Obese Women Increases Risk of Radiographic Knee Osteoarthritis: The POMA Study.

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F.W. Roemer et al., « Presence of Magnetic Resonance Imaging-Defined Inflammation Particularly in Overweight and Obese Women Increases Risk of Radiographic Knee Osteoarthritis: The POMA Study. », Serveur académique Lausannois, ID : 10.1002/acr.24568


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The present study was undertaken to assess whether the odds for incident radiographic osteoarthritis (OA) differ between men and women in regard to body mass index (BMI) and inflammatory magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) markers 1 and 2 years prior, and whether the presence of inflammation on MRI differs between normal-weight and overweight/obese individuals who develop radiographic OA up to 4 years prior. We studied 355 knees from the Osteoarthritis Initiative study that developed incident radiographic OA and 355 matched controls. MRIs were read for effusion-synovitis and Hoffa-synovitis for up to 4 consecutive annual time points. Subjects were classified as normal-weight (BMI

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