Medical Rationale
Service-connected knee injuries produce chronic mobility impairment that directly causes weight gain through reduced physical activity capacity. The inability to walk, run, or exercise without knee pain eliminates the primary caloric expenditure pathways that maintain healthy body weight. Veterans with bilateral knee conditions or knee plus back conditions face compounded mobility limitations. Weight gain from musculoskeletal disability creates a self-reinforcing cycle: increased BMI adds 3-5 pounds of effective joint load per pound of body weight, accelerating further joint degeneration. The VA now recognizes obesity as an intermediate step in secondary service connection — obesity caused by service-connected mobility impairment can itself cause additional conditions (OSA, diabetes, hypertension).
Key Studies
Messier SP et al. (2005) Arthritis Rheum (weight and knee loading); Felson DT et al. (1997) Ann Intern Med (weight gain and OA progression); VA General Counsel Precedent Opinion VAOPGCPREC 1-2017 (obesity as intermediate step).
Filing Tips
Document weight history showing gain after knee injury — compare service weight to current weight. Medical records documenting physical activity restrictions from service-connected knee condition. Primary care or endocrinology nexus letter connecting mobility impairment to weight gain. IMPORTANT: VA does not rate obesity itself as a disability, but recognizes it as an intermediate step for secondary conditions (OSA, diabetes, GERD, etc.). File the downstream conditions (e.g., knee → obesity → OSA) with the full causal chain documented.