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  • What's that sound?

  • Depending on whom you ask,

  • the crackle of popping joints is either the sound of sweet relief

  • or the noxious tones of a stomach-turning habit.

  • Really, though. What's that sound?

  • I mean, why does bending your joints in a certain way make them pop like that?

  • Scientists have offered several explanations,

  • including rapidly stretching ligaments,

  • and in severe cases, actual bones grinding against each other.

  • But the most common explanation

  • for why your stretched-out joints sound like bubbles popping

  • is that, well, there are bubbles in there.

  • The joints in your fingers are the easiest ones to crack,

  • but many people also crack the joints between vertebrae in their neck and back,

  • and even their hips, wrists, shoulders and so on.

  • All these joints are synovial joints,

  • and they're the most flexible ones in your body.

  • The space between the two bones is filled with a viscous liquid,

  • synovial fluid, which contains long, lubricating molecules,

  • like hyaluronic acid and lubricin.

  • Synovial fluid is more or less the texture of egg yolk

  • and its primary purpose is to cushion the bones

  • and help them glide past each other.

  • It also contains phagocytic cells

  • that help clean up any bone or cartilage debris that ends up in the joint.

  • But the reason it's important for knuckle cracking

  • is that, like other fluids in your body,

  • it contains lots of dissolved gas molecules .

  • Knuckle-crackers know that to get that satisfying pop,

  • you stretch the joint farther than it normally goes

  • by bending your fingers backwards, for example.

  • When you do that, the bones move away from each other.

  • The space between bones gets bigger,

  • but the amount of synovial fluid stays constant.

  • That creates a low-pressure zone

  • that pulls dissolved gases out of the synovial fluid,

  • just like the carbon dioxide that fizzes out of soda

  • when you twist open the cap.

  • Inside the joint, the escaping gases form a bubble with a pop.

  • But the bubble doesn't last long.

  • The surrounding fluid presses on it until it finally collapses.

  • The bubble's gases scatter throughout the synovial cavity

  • and slowly dissolve back into the fluid over the course of about twenty minutes,

  • which is why it can take a while before you can pop the same joint again.

  • Some scientists think there may actually be two pops.

  • One when the bubble forms, and another when it bursts.

  • Popping a joint temporarily enlarges it,

  • which may be why dedicated knuckle-, neck- and back-crackers

  • say the habit makes their joints feel looser and more flexible.

  • But you may have heard from a concerned relative or annoyed officemate

  • that cracking your joints will give you arthritis.

  • A doctor named Donald Unger heard this, too.

  • So, determined to disprove his mother's warnings,

  • he cracked the knuckles of his left hand repeatedly for 50 years,

  • while the right-hand knuckles went unpopped.

  • 36,500 cracks later, both hands were arthritis-free.

  • For this selfless act of devotion to science,

  • Dr. Unger received an Ig Nobel Prize,

  • a parody of the Nobel Prize that recognizes wacky,

  • but weirdly fascinating, scientific accomplishments.

  • Unger wrote that his results should prompt investigation into other parental beliefs,

  • like the importance of eating spinach.

  • The jury's still out on that one.

  • As for knuckle-cracking,

  • one study suggests that all that joint stretching

  • and bubble bursting can cause your hands to swell

  • and weaken your grip.

  • But the biggest proven danger seems to be annoying those around you.

What's that sound?

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TED-ED】ナックルが弾けるのはなぜ?- エレノア・ネルセン (【TED-Ed】Why do your knuckles pop? - Eleanor Nelsen)

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    稲葉白兎 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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