Hearing “snap, crackle, pop!” with no visible sign of the Rice Krispie trio can only mean one thing: snapping joints—likely knuckle cracking, to be more specific. Whether or not the sensation happens ...
A good portion of people enjoying cracking or popping their knuckles. Or sometimes their knuckles, back, neck, and ankles. KENS 5's sister station WFMY wanted to know if the habit leads to arthritis.
An arthritis doctor explains what knuckle cracking really does to joints, whether it can cause arthritis, and when the habit ...
The popping sound habitual knuckle crackers make may be annoying — or even alarming — but are they actually harming themselves? The research is somewhat limited but generally concludes that ...
A satisfying habit for some and pure annoyance to others. But whether you crack one joint or all ten fingers at once, chances are someone has warned you: “Stop that, you’ll get arthritis.” That claim ...
TLC’s “Crack Addicts” star and chiropractor Alessandra Colón joins TODAY to separate fact from fiction on debated chiropractic topics and shares tips for achieving optimal body alignment. I toured the ...
Joint cracking is one of those habits most of us acquire without thinking about it. A knuckle popped mid-sentence. A back twisted as we stand up. A ...
To verify, we reached out to Allston Stubbs. He was the associate professor of orthopedic surgery at Wake Forest Baptist Health. He first explained the process. "You're not actually breaking the bone, ...
BLOOM (TAMPA)- Gayle Guyardo, host of Bloom, sat down with Chiropractic Physician and Acupuncturist Dr. Cathleen Gerenger to discuss myths around knuckle cracking.