Subtitles section Play video
-
If you like to run, someone has probably warned you that you're wrecking your knees.
-
The idea is that when you run, the flexible, tough tissue that cushions your knee joints, called cartilage, takes a pounding.
-
And over time, that cartilage supposedly wears down, which makes your bones rub together, and leads to the pain, stiffness, and swelling of osteoarthritis.
-
But is this actually true?
-
Past studies that compared runners to non-runners, sometimes collecting data over a couple of decades, have found mixed results.
-
A few have found that there's more risk of knee osteoarthritis in specific groups of runners, like in men younger than 50 who run more than 32 km a week.
-
But lots of papers comparing long-term runners to swimmers, non-runners, or sedentary people didn't turn up evidence that running will doom you to arthritic misery.
-
In some cases runners even seemed to be less likely to get arthritis.
-
So could running actually protect your joints somehow?
-
To find out, a study published in 2016 looked at what's happening inside your knees when you run.
-
Scientists gathered a group of male and female runners, younger than 30 with no history of knee problems.
-
And brought them in for two experiment sessions over two days.
-
They started each session by collecting a blood sample and a bit of synovial fluid, the natural lubricant inside the knee joint.
-
Then they had the participants spend 30 minutes running on a treadmill one day, and 30 minutes sitting on another day.
-
Afterward they took more samples.
-
Getting a useful amount of fluid from healthy knees, turned out to be pretty tricky.
-
And the researchers only ended up with complete data for 6 people.
-
But the results are still interesting.
-
The scientists were looking for molecules related to inflammation, because extra inflammation has been linked to the development of arthritis.
-
They were also measuring a compound called cartilage oligomeric matrix protein, or COMP, which can be a marker of arthritis if there's a bunch of it in your synovial fluid.
-
After running, the subjects had less of these molecules in their knees, and more in their blood, spread out in their bodies.
-
Sitting, on the other hand, slightly increased concentrations of COMP and some other inflammatory molecules in their knees.
-
It's hard to tell exactly what this means.
-
But it seems like running might squeeze inflammatory compounds out of your knee, which could reduce cartilage damage and arthritis.
-
But this study did have a pretty tiny sample size, so... Jury's still out!
-
But if you like running and it makes you feel healthy, the next time someone says, "But you'll ruin your knees!"
-
Take it with a grain of salt.
-
Thanks for asking and thanks especially to all our patrons who keep these answers coming.
-
For more running-related science, check out this other SciShow video, where Hank explains why you get that sharp pain in your sides sometimes.