Subtitles section Play video
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Rob: Hello and welcome to 6 Minute English. I'm Rob.
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Neil: and I'm Neil. Hello. (cracking knuckles)
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Rob: Don't do that please, Neil, It makes my flesh creep.
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Neil: Oh dear, if something makes your flesh creep it means you feel frightened or disgusted by something.
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I don't know why I do it. It just feels nice.
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Rob: But you'll end up with arthritis when you're older, you know.
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Arthritis is a disease that causes pain and swelling in joints of the body.
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Neil: That's an old wives' tale, Rob!
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And that means an old idea or belief that has no scientific support.
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Rob: OK, if you say so, Professor.
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And since you're in a scientific mood, how about answering today's quiz question.
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Which type of joint can you crack? Is it ... a) fibrous?
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b) cartilaginous? Or c) synovial?
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Neil: OK, this professor isn't feeling too clever today.
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I'm going to have to take a guess and say, c) synovial.
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Rob: OK. Well, we'll find out how smart you really are later on in the programme.
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Now let's listen to Greg Kawchuk, Professor of Rehabilitation Medicine at the University of Alberta.
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Rehabilitation means the process of helping somebody get better from an illness or injury.
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Greg Kawchuk: We've recently been able to use some new technology through MRI imaging
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to see for the first time what is actually happening inside the joint when someone pops or cracks their knuckles.
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And because of that we're hopeful that we'll be able to start to ask questions about
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why is it that some people can do this and other people can't.
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Neil: What does MRI stand for?
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Rob: It means Magnetic Resonance Imaging.
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Hospitals use this technology to produce an image of the inside of a person's body.
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Neil: So some people can't crack their knuckles. Can you, Rob?
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Rob: I don't know, and I'm not about to try.
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But it isn't just finger knuckles that crack you can do it with your neck, back, knees, ankles and toes.
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Neil: Professor Greg Kawchuk says that comparing people who crack their knuckles and people who don't
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might provide some insight or understanding into whose joints are healthier.
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Rob: Sounds interesting.
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But what actually happens when you crack your knuckles, Neil?
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Neil: Well, when you stretch or bend your finger to pop the knuckle,
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you're making the bones of the joint pull apart... like this...(cracking knuckles)
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Rob: Please don't do it again!
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Neil: Well, it stretches the space around the joint
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and surrounding fluid and causes a decrease in pressure.
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As a result, gas dissolved in the fluid becomes less soluble
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or less able to be dissolved leading to the formation of bubbles.
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Now when you stretch the joint far enough, these bubbles burst, producing the "pop" sound.
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Rob: Ouch! Excellent well, thanks for the biology demonstration there, Neil ...
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Neil: Any time! Any time, Rob!
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Now let's hear from the professor again about the medical value of research into knuckle cracking.
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Greg Kawchuk: When our engineering colleagues do this between
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two flat surfaces say of ceramic or porcelain...
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When they do this and they pull them apart quickly
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and there's a little bit of fluid in between
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they can use electron microscopy to see there's been tremendous damage to the surfaces of the joints.
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But for some reason we don't see that in the human joint.
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There's something that makes it very resilient.
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Rob: Interesting stuff!
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So scientists have performed experiments to imitate what happens in a human joint
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when you crack your knuckles.
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And when you quickly pull apart a pair of ceramic or clay,
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tiles with fluid between them, it causes a lot of damage to the surface of the tiles.
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Neil: So why don't human joints get damaged as well?
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Rob: Well, the scientists don't actually know.
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They can see the damage to the tiles using electron microscopy
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that's a very powerful microscope.
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But it's not clear what makes the human joint so resilient to damage
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and resilient in this context means returning to its original shape
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after being stretched or bent.
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Neil: Right. But with further research scientists may be able to find out and then use this
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information to help people with joint problems.
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Rob: Or they could create synthetic or man-made materials
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which can withstand wear and tear better than current ones.
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Withstand means not be damaged by something
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and wear and tear means damage as a result of ordinary use.
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Neil: Can we have the answer to today's quiz question now, Rob?
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Rob: Yes, of course. So which type of joint can you crack? Is it ... a) fibrous?
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b) cartilaginous? Or c) synovial?
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Neil: And I said: c) synovial.
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Rob: You are quite clever actually because you are right, or was it a good guess?
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Neil: It was a good guess.
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Rob: Well done! And synovial is the name for the fluid that surrounds this type of joint.
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Neil: OK. So can we hear the words we learned today again?
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Rob: Of course. We heard:
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make your flesh creep
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arthritis
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an old wives' tale
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rehabilitation
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MRI (which means "Magnetic Resonance Imaging")
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insight
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soluble
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ceramic
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resilient
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synthetic
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withstand
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wear and tear
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Neil: Well, that's the end of today's 6 Minute English.
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We thought it was a cracking show!
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Please join us again soon.
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Both: Bye.
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Rob: Go on Neil, one more time.
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Neil: Here we go. (cracking knuckles) Feels great!
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Rob: Horrible!