Long-term estrogen replacement therapy (ERT) may help protect against knee osteoarthritis (OA), according to preliminary findings by Australian researchers (Ann Rheum Dis. 2001;60:332-336).
The fact that OA is more common in women than men suggests that sex hormone differences play a role in the disease, prompting speculation that ERT in postmenopausal women may help protect joints.
Studies examining the issue have been inconclusive, but radiographythe tool used to measure the presence and degree of OAis insensitive to changes in joints over a short term. In the new study, however, researchers used magnetic resonance imaging to measure knee cartilage volume in 81 postmenopausal women42 current ERT users who had used ERT for at least 5 years and 39 age-matched controls who had never used ERT.
They found (after adjusting for years since menopause, body mass index, age at menopause, and smoking) that women taking ERT had significantly . . . [Full Text of this Article]