Thursday, June 16, 2011

Is It Just Joint Pain or Arthritis?

Simple joint pain or arthritis?
Your joint pain might affect your mobility and flexibility, but in case you have arthritis, you are going to face long-term after effects in various ways. Before it is too late to treat your pains, you should clarify from your doctor, whether it is simple joint pain or arthritis. 

If you have joint pain associated with swollen joints and the pain increases with your movement, then you should better book an appointment with your doctor. To many people arthritis is a problem felt only in the lower part of the body. But it is not true. You can feel this type of symptoms in your finger-joints, knee, shoulder-joints or any similar place in your body. The main thing to notice is that whether the pain is related to the movement of that particular body part. Usually for osteoarthritis, the pain increases the time when you are most active and goes away automatically when you are under rest. In case of rheumatoid arthritis, this type of discomfort might also be accompanied with high temperature or skin rashes. 

It is also a misconception that arthritis affects only the people who are quite aged. Even younger people including teenagers and children, might be affected with this disease. 

The most crucial point here is that whenever you feel that your joints are getting creaky, you should not neglect that. In case of arthritis, the early it is diagnosed, the more certain is the chance of recovery. If you ignore the warning symptoms, you are perhaps inviting more damage to your joints. To control these discomforts related to arthritis, you need to give enough time for proper treatments. As a treatment, you might have to shift into a new lifestyle along with regular physical therapy and medications. 

Before you visit to your doctor’s place, you might do a thorough study on the type of your pain. How the pain starts and how it reduces? How do you feel during the discomfort or what are the problematic areas? And so on. All these information will help your doctor to diagnose your health condition and to start the right kind of treatment.

3 comments:

  1. When I was growing up, I had this pain in the left knee. It was intermittent. But I am happy to say the pain no longer exists, even without medication. I strongly believe I must have outgrown it.

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  2. Women should be aware of osteoporosis. This one is also worrying!!

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