Medications
Medicine can often help you to relieve
the symptoms of
osteoarthritis and allow you to continue daily
activities. But pain relief medicine does not cure arthritis or decrease the
rate of
cartilage breakdown and should be used along with home
treatment and other treatments, as recommended by your doctor.
- You can often manage mild to moderate arthritis
pain with nonprescription pain relievers, such as acetaminophen or nonsteroidal
anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs).
- Moderate to severe pain may require stronger pain relievers, such
as opioids. Your doctor may also prescribe opioids if you cannot tolerate
NSAIDs.
Medication Choices
Medicines doctors use to treat osteoarthritis
include:
For some people, acetaminophen and nonsteroidal
anti-inflammatory drugs may work equally well for mild to moderate joint pain.
Acetaminophen is usually the first medicine tried for pain relief because it
has few side effects when it is taken as directed. And studies show that
acetaminophen is better than no treatment. But most studies suggest that NSAIDs
are more effective than acetaminophen for osteoarthritis.9
Topical (applied to the skin) agents may
provide short-term pain relief.1 These include topical
NSAIDs,
capsaicin, and pain-relieving creams.
What To Think About
Pain relief is important, not
just for quality of life and for your mood, but for maintenance of joint
function and rehabilitation. If you limit or decrease the movement of your
joints because of pain, you will develop tightening, shortening, and weakness
of the ligaments, tendons, and muscles that move the joint. This leads to less
mobility and function.
When you use pain medicine, your goal is
to find relief without side effects. Acetaminophen has the fewest side effects
of any pain medicine for osteoarthritis. In some studies it is as effective as
nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and in some studies it is not.
But because it has the fewest side effects, it is the medicine to try first for
pain relief.
If you have no history of gastrointestinal bleeding
(such as stomach ulcers), kidney insufficiency, or
heart failure and if you are not taking blood
thinners, you can try nonprescription NSAIDs, including ibuprofen (such as
Motrin or Advil) or naproxen (Aleve). Take the lowest possible dose that
controls your pain. It may take a couple of weeks before NSAIDs can relieve
your pain well.
In addition to relieving pain, NSAIDS also reduce
inflammation. But inflammation does not commonly occur with osteoarthritis, so
most cases of osteoarthritis do not require an anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID).
Even so, many people with osteoarthritis say that NSAIDs work well for them.
Just remember that NSAIDS do not stop joint tissue from breaking down as
osteoarthritis progresses.
If you are taking NSAIDs every day,
especially for longer than 1 month, your doctor may want to check a blood count
or a blood test for kidney function. He or she may also suggest that you take
omeprazole to protect you from stomach ulcers. If NSAIDs are not effective,
contact your doctor, who may prescribe a higher dose, a different NSAID, or an
opioid.
Doctors may prescribe opioid pain relievers (such as
codeine or hydrocodone) for people who cannot take NSAIDs or whose pain is
unrelieved by other therapies. Used correctly, opioids can be a safe and
effective means of pain control. Studies show that you can discontinue opioids
without withdrawal difficulties if the opioid is tapered off.10
Talk to your doctor about what medicines may be
best for you. The effectiveness of medicines and the risk of side effects are
different for different people. You can try different medicines until your
symptoms are controlled.
Medicines that are being studied for
osteoarthritis include diacerein and doxycycline. Diacerein helps reduce
inflammation. Doxycycline is an
antibiotic, but it may help keep the joint space from
getting smaller in osteoarthritis. These medicines are not available yet for
use with osteoarthritis.