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Knee Pain: Never Expected This

Your knees are important. You use them every time you sit, stand, walk, lift, or jump. But when they become inflamed and irritated, even the simplest tasks can feel overwhelming.

Around one in every two adults will develop symptoms of knee osteoarthritis (OA) at some point in their lives. Even if you don’t have symptoms yet, you have about a 50/50 chance of developing them in the future.

But research out of Baylor College of Medicine suggests there may be a way to help keep OA from becoming painful.

The researchers found that walking reduces the incident of new, frequent knee pain in people 50 years or older with knee OA. The walkers had a 40% decrease in the odds of developing pain than non-walkers. Not only that, but walking also appeared to slow the odds of damage that occurs within the joint by about 20%.

I know. It sounds crazy. But still…

🚶‍♂️Walking Can Save Your Knees

The last thing you think your aching knees would want to do is take a walk. After all, wouldn’t that add even more stress on the knee joints and cause further pain and damage?

Surprisingly, it doesn’t. Your body needs movement to keep it moving! This has been proven over and over again.

Walking is one of the best ways to reduce pain, stiffness and inflammation, and improve the health of knee cartilage in symptomatic OA patients. In fact, walking can work just as well as quadriceps-strengthening exercises like chair squats or leg raises to improve joint health and reduce symptoms of pain..

If you are new to walking, start slow. Try three 15-minute walks with at least an hour of rest between them instead of one long walk. This will help keep from overworking your sedentary knees, which could temporarily result in an increase pain. So please! Take slow and easy.

🔙Walk Backward for Happier Knees

There is actually a way to boost the pain-relieving results of walking. If you are steady on your feet, just walk backward! It’s called “retro-walking.”

Compared to forward walking, backward walking can produce greater improvements in pain, strength, and mobility. Just be sure you’re steady on your feet and have a safe space to do it.

But a word of caution. While walking – forward or backward – can offer a great deal of relief and support for your knees, you could easily reverse some of those gains if you’re eating an inflammatory diet.

❌Foods That Aggravate Your Knees

While walking, quadriceps strengthening exercises and balancing exercises are all great for relieving knee pain and stiffness, eating the wrong foods can undo some of that good.

Specifically, sugar and other refined/high glycemic carbohydrates, salt, omega-6 fatty acids, red meats and dairy products all contribute to inflammation. And osteoarthritis is an inflammatory disease. The more inflammation in your body, the greater the progression of the disease.

So one of the best things you can do in addition to staying active is to eat a healthy anti-inflammatory, diet filled with plenty of fresh, plant-based foods.

Eating more of a plant-centric diet can significantly reduce pain and improve function in as early as two weeks. It can also help you lose weight. That’s a bonus, because it’s been shown that every 15 pounds lost reduces knee pain by 50% in overweight individuals with arthritis.

Take it step-by-step and one meal at a time to keep your knees in action and pain-free over the years.

SOURCES:

Walking for Exercise Can Benefit Older Adults With Osteoarthritis, Study Says. News Release. AJMC. June 2022.

Lo GH, Vinod S, Richard MJ, Harkey MS, McAlindon TE, Kriska AM, Rockette-Wagner B, Eaton CB, Hochberg MC, Jackson RD, Kwoh CK, Nevitt MC, Driban JB. Association Between Walking for Exercise and Symptomatic and Structural Progression in Individuals With Knee Osteoarthritis: Data From the Osteoarthritis Initiative Cohort. Arthritis Rheumatol. Jun 2022.

Roddy E, Zhang W, Doherty M. Aerobic walking or strengthening exercise for osteoarthritis of the knee? A systematic review. Ann Rheum Dis. 2005 Apr;64(4):544-8.

Alghadir AH, Anwer S, Sarkar B, Paul AK, Anwar D. Effect of 6-week retro or forward walking program on pain, functional disability, quadriceps muscle strength, and performance in individuals with knee osteoarthritis: a randomized controlled trial (retro-walking trial). BMC Musculoskelet Disord. 2019 Apr 9;20(1):159.

Krishnan V, Pithadia K. Effect of retro walking versus balance training on pain and disability in patients with osteoarthritis of the knee: a randomized controlled trial. Bull Fac Phys Ther. 26, 19 (2021).

Farrokhi S, Jayabalan P, Gustafson JA, Klatt BA, Sowa GA, Piva SR. The influence of continuous versus interval walking exercise on knee joint loading and pain in patients with knee osteoarthritis. Gait Posture. 2017 Jul;56:129-133.

Clinton CM, O’Brien S, Law J, Renier CM, Wendt MR. Whole-foods, plant-based diet alleviates the symptoms of osteoarthritis. Arthritis. 2015;2015:708152.