Abstract
Osteoarthritis, the most prevalent joint disease and one affecting many aging adults is strongly associated with various degrees of disability and high health costs. Commonly deemed largely incurable and progressive, it appears muscle fat deposition and its encroachment on muscle tissue may account for multiple adverse health outcomes, especially the osteoarthritic disease process. This mini review examines whether contemporary evidence supports a role for efforts towards preventing excess fat infiltration into vulnerable muscles as one means of reducing osteoarthritic pain and disability. To this end, research on this theme and reported as of June 2025 on this issue was sought. We found that with few exceptions and regardless of joint examined a role for muscle mass infiltration in osteoarthritis disability appears of high clinical significance.
Author Contributions
Copyright© 2025
Marks Ray.
License
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Competing interests The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
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Introduction
Osteoarthritis, a prevalent chronic disease affecting one or more freely moving joints and characterized by progressive bone remodelling, articular cartilage degeneration and soft tissue capsular and ligamnetous alterations continues to induce appreciable levels of physical and socioeconomic disability in a high percentage of older adults no matter where they preside To this end, this brief specially examines whether, a) the fat muscle ratio is a feature or predictor of severe osteoarthritis, b) possible treatments to counter this, c) the specific importance of its timely identification in older adults at risk for or diagnosed as having osteoarthritis. It was anticipated the literature would reveal a variety of studies highlighting the potential impact of excess muscle fat mass on osteoarthritic pain. It was also believed that if this thesis can be substantiated, a variety of muscle treatment approaches would be found to reduce osteoarthritis pain, including those that can minimize muscle fat gains that are age associated, diet mediated, or reactive and arise in the face of joint pathology and surgery
Discussion
Although osteoarthritis is currently deemed a chronic progressively disabling condition with no known cure, research over the past 10 years or more has indicated that there is strong possibility that an array of muscle related factors as well as obesity can contribute to the osteoarthritis pain and disease cycle. Conversely, a diverse array of intervention approaches that focus on maximizing muscle structure and function appear advocated to potentially reduce the degree of excess muscle fat mass often noted in this population alongside pain, so as to foster desirable outcomes, regardless of joint site and disease severity. Excess muscle fat may also impact outcomes of surgery to replace a diseased joint, stressing its importance. Applying what we do know towards primary prevention of injuries, and the adoption of active living rather than sedentary behaviors by many will however likely foster overall joint as well as general health, while helping to reduce enormous public health resource demands from depletion, even in the face of surgical solutions and especially among those in advanced disease stages. Key supportive approaches such as enabling sound dietary practices, electrical muscle stimulation, sensory motor and strength training, and Tai Chi, are likely to prove efficacious as well as safe for many in this regard. To achieve optimal results, however, a role for cognitions cannot be ignored, given the fact that pain is widespread and fear and depression are readily provoked among those with osteoarthritis and severe pain. Additionally, cases need to be carefully educated as to the considerable care they must take however, to avoid overexertion, muscle fatigue, and repetitive movements, which can heighten muscle pain inputs and accelerate cartilage destruction, as well, as excess sedentary practices. Additional care and careful monitoring to avoid overstretching the joint, and helping those with severe overweight to lose weight is advocated as well. As well, avoiding high frequency loading activities after periods of immobilization found to hasten cartilage destruction is clearly of additional import. At this point, and despite limitations of this review as well as the state of the research, it appears that while osteoarthritis continues to be described as both inevitable as well as incurable, this immensely painful disabling condition can be mediated or moderated by factors other than age or wear and tear. As such, based on cumulative and emergent evidence, it seems plausible to suggest that the osteoarthritis sufferer s wellbeing can be effectively mitigated if not reversed if efforts to minimize muscle fat invasion of vulnerable joints is forthcoming, especially if tailored to the overall health status and needs and abilities of the individual and supported by objective measures of muscle composition, force capacity, pain, cognitions, plus weight. In particular, to avert rapid or excess disease progression and disability, and its association with immense social and mobility-related losses, there appears to be an increasing body of research that supports the view that efforts to reduce muscle fat encroachment is a highly salient osteoarthritis disease mitigation strategy. Hence, even if not the key pathogenic cause of osteoarthritis, its prevention must be seen of paramount importance in minimizing osteoarthritic joint pain and dysfunction. However, since this is by no means a universally accepted idea or practice, more studies that tease out the possible relationship between muscle factors and osteoarthritic pain along with central factors that affect pain and muscle fat encroachment are warranted. Carefully controlled intervention studies with larger samples with similar muscular and disease related characteristics conducted over extensive time periods utilizing a variety of possible interventions could prove insightful as well. Presently, as per earlier studies, a recent study In short, although limited, current findings strongly highlight the degree to which muscle fat infiltration and/or enlargement may play a disabling role in the osteoarthritis disease cycle, as well fostering multiple levels of focal and systemic dysfunction, severe pain, and biomechanical and metabolic challenges. Moreover, a failure to appreciate and understand the importance of identifying, tracking, and examining muscle factors such as muscle fat mass in general in the realm of both osteoarthritis research and the design of optimal osteoarthritis rehabilitation plans and their scope and sequence may be shortsighted at best and warrants more careful study and one supported by possible AI diagnostics