Range of osteoarthritis symptoms
Osteoarthritis is characterized
primarily by stiffness and pain in the joints, although not everyone
with osteoarthritis actually experiences pain and disability. The stiffness and pain tend to be worse in
the morning (particularly for about 30 minutes after waking up) and again
in the evening, often called “first movement pain” with improvement
during the day as the person carries on his or her daily activities. Pain
that awakens one during the night is often an indicator.
Other symptoms can include:
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Swelling and warmth in one or more joints, particularly
during weather changes (which may be related to barometric
pressure changes and cooling of the air)
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Localized tenderness when the joint or affected
area of the spine is pressed
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Steady or intermittent pain in a joint, which is
often described as an aching type of pain. The pain
may be aggravated by motion
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Loss of flexibility of a joint, such as inability
to bend and pick something off the floor
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A crunching feeling or sound of bone rubbing on
bone when the joint is moved (called crepitus), particularly
notable in the neck
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An abnormal curve in the spine which may be due
to unbalanced muscle spasm
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A sensation of pinching, tingling or numbness in
a nerve or the spinal cord, which can occur when
bone spurs form at the edge of the joints of the
spine and irritate the nerves
Osteoarthritis usually develops over time. Early on, a person
may only experience joint aches after physical work or exercise, which
fades and then returns as the affected joint is used or overused. As
the cartilage between the bones gradually thins, the pain often becomes
steadier, making it difficult to walk or climb stairs. Joint pain
and stiffness can begin to occur after long periods of inactivity, such
as while sitting for long journeys or watching a two-hour movie. With
advanced osteoarthritis and increased rasping friction between bones,
the pain often becomes substantial even at rest or with very little movement.
With progressive osteoarthritis, a single joint may at first be affected,
but with time and further activities, many joints of
the body may be affected—in the base of the neck,
or in the knees, hips, hands and/or feet. Although
less common, some patients may experience severe deformities of certain
joints over time. Osteoarthritis differs from systemic forms of arthritis
because it only affects joints (although it may lead to an entrapment
of a nerve at any level in the spine or the spinal cord in the neck)
and does not affect organs or soft tissue areas of the body.
Low back (lumbar spine) osteoarthritis pain and other symptoms
As
with other joint involvement in arthritis, lower back pain is typically
most pronounced in the morning and worsens again later
in the day. Pain
is decreased during the day as the person’s normal movements stir
the fluid lubricant of the joints. Lower back pain commonly may
radiate (“referred pain”) to the pelvis, buttocks, or thighs
and sometimes to the groin. Nerve irritation from a herniated disc
or from bone spurs can cause weakness, numbness, tingling and/or pain
in the legs that often radiates to one foot. Arthritis causing
spinal stenosis or narrowing of the spinal canal in
the lower back can cause exercise or walking-related symptoms in both
legs.
Neck (cervical spine) osteoarthritis pain and other symptoms
Neck
pain from osteoarthritis again tends to be worse in the morning and evening,
with improvement during the day. This pain often radiates
to the shoulder, between the shoulder blades and up the neck to cause
headaches. With nerve entrapment or a disc herniation, there may
also be weakness or numbness of one hand, certain fingers or sometimes
even in both arms. Compression of the spinal cord in the neck can
even cause problems with walking as well as in bowel
and bladder control in severe cases.
Osteoarthritis is sometimes confused with other conditions causing
pain
Because other conditions seem similar to osteoarthritis of the spine,
particularly when symptoms are at their worst, it is important to receive
an accurate clinical diagnosis from a doctor who specializes in spinal
medicine or spinal surgery.
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) usually affects multiple joints in a symmetrical
pattern (both sides of the body being affected). Rheumatoid
arthritis is an autoimmune disease that causes chronic
inflammation of the joints and may involve other tissues or organs of
the body. Therefore, when rheumatoid arthritis flares up, symptoms can
include fatigue, poor appetite, low grade fever, muscle and joint aches,
and stiffness, again usually most notable in the morning and after periods
of inactivity. Joints, usually in the hands, wrists
and feet, frequently become red, swollen, painful, and tender.
Osteoarthritis is also sometimes confused or may be associated with
degenerative disc disease (or spondylosis), a gradual deterioration of
the disc(s) between the vertebrae of the spine. This is because
osteoarthritis and degenerated discs are commonly found together. However,
they are separate conditions and it is important to know which anatomical
changes in the spine are the actual cause of the patient’s pain
or disability.
An x-ray will show degenerative disc disease as a narrowing of the normal
disc space between adjacent vertebrae. An MRI scan may show the
early changes of a loss of water content in the disc. Degeneration
of the disc tissue increases its susceptibility to bulging or herniation.
Disc degeneration can occur at any level of the spine and can cause local
pain in the affected area with radiation of pain along the nerves emerging
from the spinal canal at that level. Symptomatic lumbar disc degeneration
is most common in people of working age, usually between 30 and 50. After
the age of 50 or 60, the affected area of the spine actually tends to
stabilize and degenerative disc disease is less likely to cause pain. In
general, one cannot equate disc degeneration or bone spur formation with
pain and disability, since about 85% of persons with such findings on
an x-ray or scan do not have a clinically significant back problem.
Osteoporosis, or low calcium content of the bones, is another condition
that does not cause but can lead to chronic back pain. With osteoporosis,
particularly more common in post-menopausal women,
bone mineral (calcium) loss may weaken bones in several parts of the
body, particularly in the hip and the spine. Spinal fractures with
compression (wedging) of vertebral bodies may occur. The pain from
an osteoporotic spinal fracture can last for several weeks as the bone
heals, and then typically turns into more of a chronic, achy pain concentrated
in the area of the back where the fracture occurred. This aching
may be similar to the sensation reported by those with osteoarthritis. A
bone density test, which measures bone mass, preferably taken of both
a long bone and a vertebral body, is used to diagnose osteoporosis. An
x-ray can usually identify a compression fracture in the spine. Since
the treatments for osteoarthritis and osteoporosis
are very different, it is critical to get an accurate diagnosis.
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