Should You Stop the Pop? Knuckle-Cracking Risks

As a lifelong knuckle cracker, I’ve heard the spiel dozens of times—you know, keep popping and you’ll end up with arthritis. Because of this, I’ve always kept an eye out for any proof that’ll prove my naggers wrong. Unfortunately, all I’ve figured out over the years is that there’s a lot of conflicting information out there when it comes to the harm that popping our joints causes. 

More than a few times, annoyed parents and teachers have told me I’ll end up with old, arthritic hands if I continue cracking my knuckles—but so far, my fingers look no worse for the wear. Is it really a bad choice for our joint health? Does it actually (crossing my crackable fingers) help us? Is repetitive cracking risky? In an attempt to get to the bottom of the situation, I consulted medical authorities for their take on cracking. 

“The jury is still out on whether cracking joints is a harmful or benign process,” says Lindsay Segal, a graduate practitioner in Samuel Merritt University’s physician assistant program. But as it turns out, studies have shown a few reliable connections between knuckle cracking and some particular joint-related problems. 

What’s in a Pop?
First, I figured I should find out a little more about my knuckles. Like all joints, they’re the place where two bones come together to allow movement—we have them in our wrists, knees, and everywhere else we can bend. Tough, flexible tissues called ligaments hold them together. Joints are covered with a capsule filled with a special kind of liquid, called synovial fluid, that acts as a lubricant as we move around; they also contain small amounts of dissolved gas, which is what causes that pop when we crack them. 

“The noise you hear with the cracking of a joint is due to a sudden release in joint pressure,” says Segal. “This releases the dissolved gases in the joint fluid.” This explains why we can’t pop and pop and pop—the gas has to build up again before it can be released, which takes about twenty minutes. 

So why, then, can some of us crack more than others? 

“It’s speculated that the laxity, or looseness, of the joint itself increases the more you crack it,” says Segal. It makes sense, therefore, that it’s very easy for me to crack my knuckles every twenty minutes, while some of my friends are unable to get even one pop out of theirs.

Joints might also make cracking sounds when our smooth cartilage breaks down, creating a rough joint surface (this is typical in arthritic joints). Another cause for cracking is when a tendon moves slightly out of place and then snaps back—this occurrence is common in knees and shoulders. Knees and ankles can also make cracking sounds when the ligaments tighten as we move our joints.

The Myths
Back to the whole reason I care about all this in the first place: are all those cautionary remarks actually based on facts, or are the people who make them just annoyed by my constant cracking? Is this release of built-up gas harmless? There are two arguments against cracking that I always hear: one, my knuckles are going to get bigger if I keep cracking, and two, I’m going to end up with arthritis. Well, neither of these scenarios is actually likely (take that, naysayers!), but there is some truth to the idea that joint cracking can cause some harm. 

As for the knuckles and arthritis? “Studies have concluded that cracking a joint doesn’t lead to arthritic changes,” says Segal. “But it is associated with joint swelling and decreased joint strength.” A Vanderbilt University write-up on the topic agrees, stating that there isn’t any direct scientific evidence to support this rumor. Studies show no change in the likelihood of getting arthritis between people who habitually crack and people who don’t. They have, however, found that people who already have arthritis or weakened joints could make their condition worse by cracking their knuckles. 

31 readers liked this story.
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03.15.2010
Mary
Age 58, I just had a thumb joint replaced, the surgeon using a piece of a tendon to create a new joint). That joint is NOT one that I habitually crack. I've cracked knuckles since I was a teen, because they felt sore until they were cracked- but not ALL joints, just certain ones. I have hereditary osteoarthritis (back, neck, hips, feet and hands) and also have had carpal tunnel surgery on both hands. The joints that bother me the most are the ones that I've never been able to crack. Some joints just won't yield. Those are the ones that get sore and swollen. My 30-year career as a claims adjuster involves typing, sitting, walking & carrying heavy files. It didn't cause my trouble, but certainly aggravated it. I asked my doctor the article question and he said, "It won't hurt anything & it didn't cause arthritis. It's no different than going to a chiropractor for relief. If you didn't have the pain, you wouldn't go in the first place." I ignore medical advice from people without degrees.
03.07.2010
Chantale Reve
Great article! I'm with Roland. I had more chronic pain (no longer, thank goodness) from marathon typing -- both at work and at home -- and from addictive gaming throughout my 30s (when I was nearly mateless except for 3 years; OK, TMI there) than from crackle-popping my knuckles. But to each his/her own. And if Ken, at 92 years old, is a champion crackle-popper, I've just received extra motivation. Mostly, though, I reserve masturbating my knuckles for people who annoy me, are aware that they annoy me, yet insist on blocking my energy. OK, only annoying co-workers fall in that category, and I'm unemployed, so my point is moot now. Anyhoo ... what I'd really like to research, now that my hands have been set free by your lucid article, is: how to make a louder, more obnoxious gas-releasing sound -- from my knuckles, that is. After all, I think I'll be landing a new job soon.
03.06.2010
Toph Kopchak
Why can I crack my ankle over and over? The other spots I do have to wait awhile but the ankle freaks my friends out enough for my enjoyment anyway.
Funny... in my mid-50s, my most flexible joints are the middle and ring fingers of both hands. They start feeling stiff and uncomfortable if I don't crack them, and I probably do it a couple dozen times a day - more if I'm sitting at the keyboard for any length of time. When someone jumps on me with "you're going to give yourself arthritis if you keep doing that," I say, "Well, arthritis THIS!" and bend my fingers back 90 degrees. That usually shuts 'em up.
03.04.2010
Ken
I have been cracking my knuckles since childhood and now I am 92 years old. I have had no unwanted results from this! No swelling of my hands, no arthritis, no loss of strength that I can discern and no unsightly changes (except obvious ageing and veins are much more prominent).
It feels good to write.

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