A review of 47 studies on 22,037 patients with knee osteoarthritis treated for at least 12 months showed no clear difference in controlling long-term pain between medications and placebos
With the exception of immune suppressants that have lots of serious side effects, medications and health supplements do not prevent progressive damage to joints and are used only to help lessen pain. The list of medications for osteoarthritis is huge, including:
• nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) such as ibuprofen and other pain medicines
• antioxidants
• bone strengtheners such as bisphosphonates
• joint injections such as hyaluronic acid and corticosteroids
• chemicals found in cartilage such as glucosamine and chondroitin sulfate
• disease-modifying agents such as cindunistat or sprifermin
Know the Cause of Your Joint Pain
If you do not already have a diagnosis, check with a doctor to see if you have rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, gout, reactive arthritis from an infection or some other known cause of joint pain. If you have sudden locking of your joint that gets better and then recurs, you may have “joint mice,” loose pieces of cartilage that slip between your cartilage to cause horrible pain. This can usually be cured by removing the loose pieces with arthroscopic surgery.
Osteoarthritis is the most common cause of chronic and progressive joint pain. It can eventually destroy the cartilage in joints, and is among the most prevalent chronic diseases and a leading cause of disability worldwide
What Causes Osteoarthritis?
A diagnosis of osteoarthritis used to mean that your doctor had ruled out other known causes of knee pain and had no idea what was causing your joint pain. Now we know that people with osteoarthritis have high blood levels of galectins that turn on a person’s immune system to cause inflammation, just as in rheumatoid arthritis or reactive arthritis
A review of 68 studies showed that osteoarthritis is associated with everything that increases inflammation, such as obesity, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, diabetes and metabolic syndrome
• omega-3 oils in fish
• leafy green foods such as kale, spinach and parsley
• weight reduction in people who are overweight (but not in thin people)
• strengthening and flexibility exercises
• avoidance of smoke
• restriction of alcohol
Several studies have shown that exercise is more effective than surgery (arthroscopic partial meniscectomy) in treating people with knee pain and degenerative meniscal tears
Anti-Inflammatory Lifestyle to Treat Osteoarthritis
• Eat an anti-inflammatory diet that includes lots of fruits, vegetables, whole grains, beans, nuts and other seeds, and restricts red meat, processed meats, foods with added sugar, all sugared drinks including fruit juices and fried foods. People who eat an anti-inflammatory Mediterranean-style diet are at reduced likelihood to get osteoarthritis
• Lose weight if overweight. Excess weight causes inflammation, and obesity is a major risk factor for osteoarthritis
• Move more. Osteoarthritis almost always worsens with inactivity. Exercise increases cartilage quality in osteoarthritis
• Avoid impact sports. The force of your feet hitting the ground can break off cartilage in your knees. Do not run, jump or participate in sports that involve the strong impact of your foot hitting the ground. Non-impact sports include cycling, swimming, water aerobics and use of machines such as ellipticals or stair-steppers where your feet are supported by the equipment as you move.
More at Lifestyle Changes to Reduce Joint Pain
Use Medications As Needed to Control Pain
It is acceptable to try to control your pain with NSAIDs or other pain medications, but realize that they do nothing to stop progressive joint destruction and do not cure the pain. Take the lowest dose that helps to relieve your pain and use them only when needed.
If the pain becomes so unbearable that it keeps you awake at night, it may be time to consider a knee replacement. However, joint replacements do not last forever; at this time most replacements last about 15 years, so put off the surgery as long as you can. Your surgeon should caution you that replacement joints increase risk for infections because any infection in your body can settle in the replaced joint since it has no local immunity. See my reports on Total Knee Replacement and Partial Knee Replacement (which I do not recommend).