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Conservative treatment

Authoring team

Conservative treatment of osteoarthritis includes:

  • aids, such as a walking stick
  • exercise - improvement of the nutrition to the cartilage, physiotherapy to strengthen the capsule and the muscles
    • exercise and weight loss are considered core treatments for patients with osteoarthritis (1)

NICE state (1):

  • Non-pharmacological management
    • exercise
      • for all people with osteoarthritis, offer therapeutic exercise tailored to their needs (for example, local muscle strengthening, general aerobic fitness)
      • consider supervised therapeutic exercise sessions
      • advise people it may initially cause pain or discomfort but long term adherence to an exercise plan will benefit the joints, reduce pain and improve function
      • consider combining therapeutic exercise with an education programme or behaviour change approaches in a structured treatment package
    • manual therapy
      • only consider for hip and knee osteoarthritis and alongside therapeutic exercise
    • weight management
      • for people who are living with overweight or obesity:
        • advise them that weight loss will improve quality of life and physical function, and reduce pain
        • support them to choose a weight loss goal
        • explain that any weight loss is likely to be beneficial, but losing 10% is likely to be better than 5%
    • consider walking aids for lower limb osteoarthritis
    • NICE state various non-pharmacological interventions should not be offered:
      • acupuncture or dry needling
      • electrotherapy treatments
      • insoles, braces, tape, splints or supports routinely

  • Pharmacological management
    • topical, oral and transdermal medicines
      • if pharmacological treatments are needed to manage osteoarthritis, use them:
        • alongside non-pharmacological treatments and to support therapeutic exercise
        • at the lowest effective dose for the shortest possible time
      • a topical non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) should be offered to people with knee osteoarthritis
      • consider a topical NSAID for people with osteoarthritis that affects other joints
      • if topical medicines are ineffective or unsuitable, consider an oral NSAID for people with osteoarthritis and take account of:
        • potential gastrointestinal, renal, liver and cardiovascular toxicity
        • any risk factors the person may have, including age, pregnancy, current medication and comorbidities
          • offer a gastroprotective treatment (such as a proton pump inhibitor) for people with osteoarthritis while they are taking an NSAID
    • NICE state these interventions should not be offered:
      • paracetamol or weak opioids routinely, unless:
        • used infrequently for short term pain relief
        • all other treatments are ineffective or unsuitable
      • glucosamine
      • strong opioids
      • intraarticular hyaluronan injections
    • intraarticular corticosteroid injections should be considered for short term relief when other pharmacological treatments are ineffective or unsuitable or to support therapeutic exercise
      • intra-articular corticosteroids injections are a widely used treatment for pain from symptomatic osteoarthritis (2)
        • systematic reviews show that the treatment effect is modest compared with intra-articular saline (often considered as placebo) and lasts for 2–4 weeks on average

For NICE guidance regarding management of chronic pain (pain that lasts for more than 3 months) then see linked item.

Reference:


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