GrownUps New Zealand

Arthritis Treatments

10223 athritis

More than half a million Kiwis live with some form of arthritis, including one in three over the age of 45. So how do you treat it? 

As yet, there is no known cure so the treatments available focus on trying to reduce the symptoms and increase movement in the affected area. Treatments vary depending on the type of arthritis you have.

Last year, research on a potential new treatment for osteo-arthritis involving stem-cell-based injections by the Genomics Institute of the Novartis Research Foundation in San Diego and Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, California found that a molecule, called kartogenin, encourages damaged cartilage to regenerate. There is lots of work to be done yet, but researchers are hopeful that kartogenin could in time offer a radical, new kind of therapy that could make a big difference to people's lives.

Right now, the only drug available to arthritis sufferers in injection form is the class of Corticosteroids, including prednisone and cortisone, which can be taken orally as well as injected directly into a painful joint. These reduce inflammation and suppress the immune system. 

Other common arthritis medications include:

Exercise and Physical Therapy

Physical therapy covers not just exercise but physical supports like splints and braces that can help support movement. Exercises can improve the range of motion and strengthen the muscles surrounding joints for some types of arthritis. 

Surgery

In severe cases, surgery may be recommended. Right now, the two options are joint replacement or joint fusion. 

Joint replacement literally involves removing the damaged joint, most typically hips and knees, and replacing it with an artificial one. 

Joint Fusion is mostly used on smaller joints, such as those in the wrist, ankle and fingers and involves removing the ends of the two bones in the joint  so they can lock together to form one rigid unit.