28 research outputs found

    Natural history of radiographic first metatarsophalangeal joint osteoarthritis: A nineteen‐year population‐based cohort study

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    Objective: To assess the long-term prevalence, natural history, progression and incidence of 73 radiographic first metatarsophalangeal joint (1st MTPJ) osteoarthritis (OA). Methods: A longitudinal, cohort design was used in which radiographic OA at the 1st MTPJ was 75 investigated in participants at year 6 (1995) and year 23 (2013-2015) from the Chingford 1000 76 Women study. Radiographic features of osteophytes (OPs) and/or joint space narrowing (JSN) at the 77 1st MTPJ were scored according to a validated foot atlas. Natural history was determined by the 78 change in prevalence, incidence, progression and worsening of OA in the 1st MTPJ. Results: Complete case matched foot radiographic data were available for 193 of the women 80 currently enrolled in the study, mean age: 75.7 years (SD: 5.2; range 69-90). At the level of the 1st 81 MTPJ, prevalence of OA at year 6 was 21.76% in the left and 24.35% in the right and at year 23 was 82 23.83% in the left and 32.64% in the right. Over the 19-year period, 13.5% of women developed 83 incident OA in the right 1st MTPJ and 8.3% in the left. Both progression and worsening of OA were 84 more evident for OPs and in the right 1st MTPJs. Conclusion: In this longest study of the natural history of radiographic 1st MTPJ OA to date, the 86 prevalence and incidence of 1st MTPJ OA increased over a 19-year period. Progression and/or 87 worsening of 1st MTPJ OA over time appears to be driven by OP development rather than JSN 88 suggestive of a biomechanical cause

    Useful knowledge, 'industrial enlightenment', and the place of India

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    Research is now turning to the missing place of technology and ‘useful knowledge’ in the debate on the ‘great divergence’ between East and West. Parallel research in the history of science has sought the global dimensions of European knowledge. Joel Mokyr's recent The Enlightened Economy (2009) argued the place of an exceptional ‘industrial enlightenment’ in Europe in explaining industrialization there, but neglected the wide geographic framework of European investigation of the arts and manufactures. This article presents two case studies of European industrial travellers who accessed and described Indian crafts and industries at the time of Britain's industrial revolution and Europe's Enlightenment discourse on crafts and manufactures. The efforts of Anton Hove and Benjamin Heyne to ‘codify’ the ‘tacit’ knowledge of a part of the world distant from Europe were hindered by the English East India Company and the British state. Their accounts, only published much later, provide insight into European perceptions of India's ‘useful knowledge’

    An Assessment of Oral Health on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation

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    An assessment on the oral health of 292 Oglala Lakota residents of the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota looks at dental issues, periodontal disease, oral lesions and need for dental care. The research was conducted by the University of Colorado, Center for Native Oral Health Research and funded by the W.K. Kellogg Foundation

    Medial longitudinal arch development of school children : The College of Podiatry Annual Conference 2015: meeting abstracts

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    Background Foot structure is often classified into flat foot, neutral and high arch type based on the variability of the Medial Longitudinal Arch (MLA). To date, the literature provided contrasting evidence on the age when MLA development stabilises in children. The influence of footwear on MLA development is also unknown. Aim This study aims to (i) clarify whether the MLA is still changing in children from age 7 to 9 years old and (ii) explore the relationship between footwear usage and MLA development, using a longitudinal approach. Methods We evaluated the MLA of 111 healthy school children [age = 6.9 (0.3) years] using three parameters [arch index (AI), midfoot peak pressure (PP) and maximum force (MF: % of body weight)] extracted from dynamic foot loading measurements at baseline, 10-month and 22-month follow-up. Information on the type of footwear worn was collected using survey question. Linear mixed modelling was used to test for differences in the MLA over time. Results Insignificant changes in all MLA parameters were observed over time [AI: P = .15; PP: P = .84; MF: P = .91]. When gender was considered, the AI of boys decreased with age [P = .02]. Boys also displayed a flatter MLA than girls at age 6.9 years [AI: mean difference = 0.02 (0.01, 0.04); P = .02]. At baseline, subjects who wore close-toe shoes displayed the lowest MLA overall [AI/PP/MF: P < .05]. Subjects who used slippers when commencing footwear use experienced higher PP than those who wore sandals [mean difference = 31.60 (1.44, 61.75) kPa; post-hoc P = .04]. Discussion and conclusion Our findings suggested that the MLA of children remained stable from 7 to 9 years old, while gender and the type of footwear worn during childhood may influence MLA development. Clinicians may choose to commence therapy when a child presents with painful flexible flat foot at age 7 years, and may discourage younger children from wearing slippers when they commence using footwear
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