I used the Illinois Library website to find an article about cracking knuckles and arthritis. I came across the New York Women’s Day magazine page by Kim C. FLodin. Kim C. Flodin is the Vice President of Marketing and Communications at The Brooklyn Hospital Center. She also has a background in writing, editing, marketing, nonprofit communications, healthcare, public relations, development, and community/patient communications. In the magazine she shares a quote by Robert L. Swezey, researcher and M.D. director of the Santa Monica Arthritis and Back Pain Center. The quote states that the rumor that cracking your knuckles causes arthritis is in fact a rumor. Swezey says this type of occasional movement and manipulation is actually not harmful to joints however there are other parts of the body that aren't safe to crack including the neck and back.
To further prove cracking your knuckles does not cause arthritis, I searched the rates of arthritis among people who have a habit of cracking their knuckles and those who do not crack their knuckles. I came across a study that consisted of “300 consecutive patients ages 45+ and without evidence of neuromuscular, inflammatory, or malignant disease were evaluated for the presence of habitual knuckle cracking and hand arthritis/dysfunction”. According to this study on the nation library of Medicine website, habitual cracking of the knuckles did not cause arthritis amongst these 300 people, but it did cause hand functional impairment. The people who cracked their knuckles were also more likely to have hand swelling and a weaker grip strength.
To make sure this is really true, I checked out the John Hopkins Arthritis Center website. I found an article by The Arthritis Center and Dimitrios Pappas. In the article it states cracking your knuckles does not cause arthritis but there have been reports “in medical literature that knuckle cracking associates with injury of the ligaments surrounding the joint or dislocation of the tendons”. The Arthritis center also found that after years and years of habitual knuckle cracking, people “may have reduced grip strength compared with people not cracking their knuckles”.
According to all these incredibly reliable people/sources/studies, there is no proven correlation between arthritis and cracking your knuckles but there are other potential consequences such as injury, swelling, and weakness of grip strength.
Sources:
Center, A. (2012, March 20). Arthritis news : Knuckle cracking Q&A from Johns Hopkins Arthritis Center. Johns Hopkins Arthritis Center. Retrieved February 8, 2023, from https://www.hopkinsarthritis.org/arthritis-news/knuckle-cracking-q-a-from/
Castellanos, J., & Axelrod, D. (1990, May). Effect of habitual knuckle cracking on hand function. Annals of rheumatic diseases. Retrieved February 8, 2023, from https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1004074/
Robert Swezey Obituary (1925 - 2016) - Los Angeles, CA - Los Angeles Times. Legacy.com. (n.d.). Retrieved February 8, 2023, from https://www.legacy.com/us/obituaries/latimes/name/robert-swezey-obituary?id=15862679#:~:text=April%2030%2C%201925%20%2D%20October%2025,and%20teaching%20in%20rheumatological%20rehabilitation.https://www.proquest.com/magazines/truth-about-knuckle-cracking/docview/1866037632/se-2?accountid=14553 https://www.proquest.com/magazines/truth-about-knuckle-cracking/docview/1866037632/se-2?accountid=14553
https://www.linkedin.com/in/kim-c-flodin-39747014/