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High heels may help women avoid
knee problems
London -
New research says women who wear high heels may avoid painful knee
conditions in later life.
Fears that spine-bending stilettos
could lead to knee arthritis are unfounded, according to University of
Warwick researchers.
They discovered that three-inch heels
were associated with reduced risks of joint problems.
Professor Margaret Thorogood, from
the Medical School, said certain shoes did not cause knee problems but
that being overweight before 40, doing demanding physical work and
previous knee injuries all did.
In fact, there was a link between
regular dancing in three-inch heels and a reduced risk of knee
problems, the academic said.
Stilettos were not to blame for knee
arthritis as more than half of the 111 women surveyed for the study -
of whom some suffered with the condition and some had no knee pain at
all - wore them.
Some 55.2 per cent of the women with
knee arthritis regularly wore 3ins heels as did 67.1 per cent of women
with no pain.
Professor Thorogood said: "Women who
smoke, are overweight and do a lot of heavy housework such as
scrubbing are more likely to develop painful knees later in life.
"But women who wear stiletto heels
will be reassured to learn that their choice of fashion-before-comfort
footwear will not lead to knee joint problems and may even prevent
them."
The medical community previously
thought that one reason why women were twice as likely to develop knee
osteoarthritis than men could be high-heels.
More than 100 women aged 50 to 70
participated in the study which was published in the Journal of
Epidemiology and Community Health. -- Ananova
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