
Best Dx/Best Rx: Osteoarthritis
Osteoarthritis
Christopher Wise, M.D.
Medical College of Virginia at Virginia Commonwealth University
Definition/Key Clinical Features
Differential Diagnosis
Best Tests
Best Therapy
Definition/Key Clinical Features
- Degeneration of articular cartilage and reactive changes
in surrounding bone and periarticular tissue
- Associated with aging, obesity, bone density, hormonal
status, nutritional factors, joint dysplasia, trauma, occupational factors,
hereditary factors
- Articular pain—hands, hips, knees, shoulders, cervical
or lumbar spine
- Worsens with activity, improves with rest
- Usually chronic
- Worsens gradually over time
- Osteophytes (bone spurs)
- Stiffness in morning and after sitting for extended
periods
- Mild/moderate swelling
- Crepitus
- Bony enlargement
- Periarticular tenderness
- Possible synovial effusions (particularly in knee)
- Deformity, limited range of motion, loss of function,
instability after many years of disease
Differential Diagnosis
- Injury
- Inflammatory conditions
- Rheumatoid arthritis
- Ankylosing spondylitis
- Reiter syndrome
- Psoriasis
- Polymyalgia rheumatica
- Malignancies
- Metastatic breast cancer
- Lung cancer
- GI cancer
- Myeloma
- Bone disease
- Osteonecrosis
- Paget disease
- Osteochondritis
- Osteoporosis
- Metabolic arthritis
- Gout
- Calcium pyrophosphate deposition disease
- Hemochromatosis
- Ochronosis
- Wilson disease
- Acromegaly
- Tendinitis
- Bursitis
- Peripheral neuropathies
- Hereditary
- Perthes disease
- Chondrodysplasia
Best Tests
- History and physical examination may be sufficient for
diagnosis
Radiography: Characteristic Features
- Joint space narrowing, often asymmetrical
- Films of knees taken during weight bearing are helpful
- Subchondral bone sclerosis
- Subchondral cysts
- Osteophytes
- Subluxation or fusion of severely affected joints
- Central erosion in fingers
Lab Studies
- Useful only to rule out other diagnoses
- ESR, rheumatoid factor, uric acid usually normal
- Synovial fluid noninflammatory—no crystals and few leukocytes
Best Therapy
Nonpharmacologic
- Exercise (focus on muscle strengthening, especially
in knees)
- Weight loss
- Ensure adequate dietary calcium and vitamins C and D
- Patellar taping, wedged insoles, bracing, canes, or
crutches
Pharmacologic Therapy for Osteoarthritis
- Acetaminophen: first choice for most patients; doses
should be limited in patients with exposure to potentially hepatotoxic substances,
especially alcohol
- Dose: 3,000–4,000 mg/day
- Cost/mo: $6.50
- NSAIDs: alternative; usually provide 50%–75% relief;
risk of gastric ulcers and bleeding
- Ibuprofen
- Dose: 600 mg q.i.d.
- Cost/mo: $12.99
- Naproxen
- Dose: 500 mg b.i.d.
- Cost/mo: $17.99
- Piroxicam
- Dose: 20 mg q.d.
- Cost/mo: $7.99
- Sulindac
- Dose: 100 mg b.i.d.
- Cost/mo: $21.22
- Selective cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) inhibitors: efficacy
equal to generic NSAIDs; can reduce GI complications
- Celecoxib
- Dose: 100–200 mg b.i.d.
- Cost/mo: $80.00
- Acetaminophen/codeine: moderately effective; generally
avoided but useful in selected patients; use with caution in elderly patients
- Dose: one to two tabs/day
- Cost/mo: $15.98
- Topical capsaicin: transient effect; may be useful in
some patients, especially for hands and knees
- Dose: 0.025% cream three to four times daily
- Cost/mo: 8 oz/$63.99
- Tramadol: may be as effective as acetaminophen + codeine
- Dose: 50 mg, two to four tabs/day
- Cost/mo: $56.99
- Triamcinolone acetonide: for knee OA and effusion
- Dose: 10–40 mg intra-articular injections every 3 mo
- Cost/mo: not available
- Sodium hyaluronate: relieves pain for several months;
comparable to NSAIDs; lasts longer than intra-articular steroids
- Dose: 3–5 weekly intra-articular injections
Surgery
- Arthroscopic debridement of the knee
- Realignment of a degenerative knee
- Total joint replacement
July 2006
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