OA Basics & Pathophysiology - Joint Misery Mechanics
- Osteoarthritis (OA): Most common arthritis; chronic, degenerative disorder characterized by cartilage loss and structural joint changes.
- Epidemiology: Leading cause of disability worldwide. Prevalence ↑ with age (often >40 yrs), obesity; significant burden in India.
- Key Pathophysiology:
- Cartilage: Enzymatic degradation (MMPs) → loss of proteoglycans, Type II collagen damage → fibrillation, erosion.
- Subchondral bone: Sclerosis (thickening), cyst formation.
- Osteophytes: Bony outgrowths at joint margins, attempt at repair.
- Synovium: Mild, secondary inflammation (synovitis) may occur.

⭐ Osteoarthritis is primarily considered a non-inflammatory arthritis, though secondary inflammatory components can be present.
Risk Factors & Clinical Features - Suspects & Symptoms
- Risk Factors:
- Non-Modifiable: ↑Age, Female gender, Genetics.
- Modifiable: Obesity (BMI > 30), Joint trauma/overuse, Occupation.
- Clinical Presentation:
- Insidious onset pain: worse with activity, relieved by rest.
- Morning stiffness: duration < 30 minutes.
- Crepitus, restricted range of motion.
- Bony enlargements (osteophytes).
- Commonly Affected Joints:
- Hands: DIP (Heberden's nodes), PIP (Bouchard's nodes), 1st CMC joint. 📌 Mnemonic: 'Bouchard's (PIP) Before Heberden's (DIP)' alphabetically & proximally.
- Knees, Hips, Spine (cervical, lumbar, facet joints).

⭐ The presence of Heberden's nodes (DIP) and Bouchard's nodes (PIP) is highly characteristic of hand osteoarthritis.
Diagnosis & Imaging - Spotting the Wear
- Clinical diagnosis (American College of Rheumatology - ACR criteria supportive).
- X-ray: 📌 LOSS (Loss of joint space, Osteophytes, Subchondral sclerosis, Subchondral cysts). Kellgren-Lawrence (KL) Grade 0-4 (quantifies radiographic severity).

- Labs: Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate (ESR)/C-reactive Protein (CRP) normal. Synovial fluid: White Blood Cell (WBC) < 2000/μL (non-inflammatory).
⭐ Inflammatory markers (ESR, CRP) are typically normal in Osteoarthritis, distinguishing it from inflammatory arthropathies.
Osteoarthritis (OA) vs. Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) Highlights
| Feature | OA | RA |
|---|---|---|
| Stiffness (AM) | < 30 min | > 1 hr |
| Joints | Asymmetric; DIP, PIP, 1st CMC, Knee, Hip | Symmetric; MCP, PIP, Wrist, MTP |
| Systemic | No | Yes (fatigue, malaise) |
| Labs | Normal ESR/CRP | ↑ ESR/CRP, RF/ACPA often +ve |
| X-ray | LOSS findings | Erosions, juxta-articular osteopenia |
Management Strategies - Easing the Ache
Primary Goals: Pain relief, ↑functional improvement, slowing disease progression.
Non-Pharmacological:
- Patient education
- Weight loss (esp. for knee/hip OA)
- Exercise (aerobic, strengthening, range of motion)
- Physiotherapy & Occupational therapy
- Assistive devices (canes, braces)
Pharmacological:
- First-line: Acetaminophen (up to 3-4 g/day)
- NSAIDs (oral/topical): Lowest effective dose, shortest duration. Consider GI/CV risk; COX-2 inhibitors an option.
- Intra-articular corticosteroids: For acute flares.
- Intra-articular Hyaluronic acid: Viscosupplementation (controversial efficacy).
- Duloxetine: For chronic pain, esp. with neuropathic component.
- Avoid long-term opioids.
Surgical (Advanced OA):
- Arthroscopy (limited role)
- Osteotomy
- Arthroplasty (joint replacement for hip/knee)
⭐ Weight loss of even 5-10% of body weight can significantly reduce pain and improve function in overweight individuals with knee OA.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
Error: Failed to generate content for this concept group.
Continue reading on Oncourse
Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.
CONTINUE READING — FREEor get the app