Ann Arbor, MI What causes joint pain besides rheumatoid arthritis? Many...
Health Information What causes joint pain besides rheumatoid arthritis?
What causes joint pain besides rheumatoid arthritis?
Many diseases in addition to rheumatoid arthritis may cause joint
pain.
Osteoarthritis: The
illness most often confused with rheumatoid arthritis is osteoarthritis. Although
these diseases share the symptom of severe joint pain with reduced mobility,
they have distinct causes and treatments.
Osteoarthritis
is caused by wear and tear over time or by injury to the joints, which results in
the degeneration of the hard, smooth layer of cartilage that normally covers
and protects the ends of the bones.
Unlike rheumatoid arthritis,
osteoarthritis is not usually associated with activation of the
immune system, so people with osteoarthritis do not
have the systemic symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis such as fever and fatigue
that are caused by the release of chemical messengers from immune cells.
Patients with osteoarthritis may develop bony enlargements of the
affected joints, but they do not have the signs of inflammation around the
joints, such as warmth, redness, and soft swelling.
Because
rheumatoid arthritis is a systemic disease, which means that it spreads freely
through the body as it follows the flow of immune cells in the bloodstream, it most
commonly affects joints symmetrically on both sides of the body. By contrast,
osteoarthritis is often more localized, especially when a joint becomes
arthritic secondary to injury, and therefore osteoarthritis is more likely if the arthritis is
on only one side of the body, or asymmetric.
Different joints are
preferentially affected by the two diseases. Rheumatoid arthritis is most
common in the small joints, such as the knuckles, wrists, elbows, ankles, toes,
shoulders, and neck. Osteoarthritis very commonly affects the large
weight-bearing joints in the hips and knees, as well as the thumb and the joints closest to the tips of the fingers.
Other joint diseases: Like
rheumatoid arthritis, other
autoimmune diseases can also attack the tissues of the
joint.
Lupus: Lupus most
often occurs in young women, and it affects organs all over the body. Other
symptoms of lupus include pleurisy, butterfly facial rash, sun-sensitive
rashes, hair loss, oral ulcers, rash, and seizures.
Sjögren's syndrome: Symptoms include dry eyes and dry
mouth (sicca syndrome) and sometimes joint pain.
Sarcoidosis, which can also affect the lungs and other
organs throughout the body
Some forms of polymyositis, an
autoimmune disorder affecting the muscles
Infections: If bacteria or
viruses get into the joint space, they will initiate a local immune response
leading to swelling of the joint and pain. Bacterial infections of joints will
cause severe pain and swelling only in the single joint, because the infection tends
to be localized. Viruses-especially hepatitis B and C, HIV, and parvovirus-can
affect single joints but also can cause a generalized reaction that affects
joints all over the body. Infection-associated arthritis generally resolves
when the infection is treated.
Gout: Uric
acid crystals that form in
gout can get into the joint and cause periodic acute
joint pain and swelling. When gout is treated with medications, the arthritis
that it causes goes away.
Pseudogout:
Calcium pyrophosphate crystals get into the joint and cause acute pain and
swelling. When treated with medications, the pain disappears.
Polymyalgia rheumatica: This is seen in people older than 60,
with a usually abrupt onset of pain and stiffness in the neck, both hips,
shoulders, and buttocks.
Fibromyalgia: The
fibromyalgia syndrome can cause joint pain but can be
distinguished from rheumatoid arthritis by the predominance of pain and tender
points in soft tissue and the absence of swollen joints. Fibromyalgia is a
poorly understood disorder in which it appears that the body's perception of
normal stimuli is altered so that widespread pain occurs, some of which is in
the joints.
Examples of causes of joint pain by distribution of affected joints
Type of arthritis
Affects many joints on both sides of the body
Affects a few joints often only on one side of the body
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