Relaxing Or Turning The Arthritis Arthritis Handbook, Is That Right?

YOGYAKARTA Without realizing it, while waiting or taking a break while doing something, we often thread the fingerprint until it reads. Although relief, it's not not risky. Putting your finger, is satisfactory and helps overcome stressful situations. But follow the explanation of a reumatologist, is it true that this activity can cause joint inflammation?

The fingerprint is a jointity among books one with another on the finger. According to doctor Jason Liebowitz, a reumatologist at Rockway, New Jersey, theoretic sound generated by the books of the joints comes from a nitrogen bubble in the synovial fluid. Not only on the finger, this fluid is also found in all joints of the body. This synovial fluid is a natural ingredient that helps lubricate joints.

When moving, the sinnovial liquid protects the prone bone from wear. Well, if it sounds often it creates negative pressure and leads to the formation of bubbles in the liquid. Experts believe that the crack sound is a up' of the broken bubble. Launching Huffpost, Tuesday, December 6, the new research shows that the sound is actually a bubble formation.

This phenomenon occurs especially in small joints, such as in the hands and joints of facets in the spine, explained Dr. Robert G. Hylland, assistant clinical professor at Michigan State University College of Ostheopathic Medicine.

Not everyone can scroll or sound the two parts of the joints mentioned above. They have a looser joints that can't sound when pressed and not fluid doesn't make bubbles. If you include ringing your fingerprint often, it turns out that it takes at least 20 minutes for this cavity to fill the bubble again. Obviously the rheumatologist Dr. Iziegbe Ehiorobo, why it takes time to sound again when put on pressure.

In a few cases, occasionally reported reports of injuries related to knuckle-knuckle-tracking or ring a fingerprint were found. But this Harvard report is due to extreme suppression. In general, many experts have found no evidence of the risk of rearranging a fingerprint related to arthritis.

Arthritis itself, there are many factors. Genetic content is only a very small factor. Meanwhile, evidence of recolling the fingerprint was not found to cause damage to prone bones in joints and muscles.