Symptoms
Symptoms of
osteoarthritis include:
- Pain, commonly in the
hands
,
hips
,
knees
, or
feet
, and sometimes in the
spine
. Pain usually is related to activity of the
joint and is worse at the end of the day or after periods of activity. As the
disease progresses, pain is present even during rest. - Stiffness
(lasting less than 1 hour) after periods of inactivity, such as in the morning
after a night's sleep or after sitting for a long time.
- Limited
joint motion.
- Tenderness and occasional swelling.
-
Joint deformity (usually in later stages of osteoarthritis).
- Joint
cracking or "creaking" (crepitus), often accompanied by pain. This creaking
also may occur in a normal (nonarthritic) joint and is usually painless.
Osteoarthritis of the spine can also narrow the openings
that make space for the spinal cord and for the nerves that branch off the
spinal cord (spinal nerves). This is called
spinal stenosis. It can lead to pressure on the spinal
cord or spinal nerves. This pressure can cause pain, weakness, or
numbness.
Symptoms of osteoarthritis range
from minor to severe. Symptoms may depend on which joints are involved. If your
weight-bearing joints (such as hips and knees) are affected, it often results
in more problems than if you have osteoarthritis in non-weight-bearing joints,
such as your fingers.
Usually, osteoarthritis is limited to one
set of joints, such as both knees. But osteoarthritis may affect more than one
location in the body (for example, the knees and hands). Osteoarthritis usually
only causes symptoms in one or more joints. Symptoms that affect the whole
body, such as fever, weight loss, or rash, are not seen in
osteoarthritis.
As osteoarthritis becomes more severe, symptoms
may include a total loss of function in the affected joints.
- Compare osteoarthritis with rheumatoid arthritis.
- Learn about other conditions with symptoms similar to osteoarthritis.