In my practice, I often see men and women in Dhaka who are living with diabetes and also struggling with daily joint pain. Some patients describe a dull ache in the knees after walking, others talk about shoulder stiffness that makes it hard to comb hair or wear clothes, and some feel burning pain in the feet that gets worse at night. When we hear the words “joint pain” and “diabetes” together, many families assume the problem is only age or only sugar. In reality, the picture is usually more mixed.
One important point I want Bangladeshi patients to understand is this: joint pain in diabetic patients is not one single disease. It is a pattern of problems that can include arthritis, tendon irritation, nerve pain, reduced circulation, and sometimes infection. That is why a “one medicine for everyone” approach often fails. A good plan starts with correct diagnosis, then careful treatment that matches the real cause.
Why diabetes can make joint problems feel worse
Diabetes can affect the body in several ways that change how joints, tendons, and nerves behave.
Higher inflammation and slower tissue recovery
When sugar control is poor for long periods, the body may stay in a more inflammatory state. In practical terms, this can mean that small tendon injuries take longer to settle, and stiffness can become more persistent. It does not mean that every pain is “because of sugar,” but sugar control can strongly influence how quickly you recover.
Extra load from weight gain and reduced activity
Many patients in Bangladesh reduce walking when pain begins, and then gain weight. That extra load increases stress on weight-bearing joints like the knee, hip, and ankle. It becomes a cycle: pain reduces activity, reduced activity increases weight, and weight increases pain.
Nerve-related pain that mimics joint pain
Some people with diabetes develop nerve irritation or neuropathy. Burning, tingling, numbness, or electric-shock type pain can be misread as a joint problem. If we treat it like arthritis only, the patient stays frustrated.
Foot problems that change gait and overload the knee and hip
When feet are painful, people change the way they walk without noticing. Over time, abnormal walking mechanics can worsen knee pain, hip pain, and back pain.
Common causes of pain in diabetes that I see in Dhaka
Different patients have different patterns, but some causes are very common.
Knee osteoarthritis and meniscus irritation
Knee arthritis is common in middle-aged and older adults, and it can be more symptomatic when weight is higher and muscles are weaker. Some patients also have meniscus problems that cause locking, catching, swelling, or sudden pain after twisting.
Frozen shoulder (adhesive capsulitis)
Shoulder stiffness and pain that gradually increases, especially difficulty reaching overhead or behind the back, may suggest frozen shoulder. This condition is commonly seen in people with diabetes. The key is early recognition and steady rehabilitation.
Tendon problems (Achilles, elbow, rotator cuff, wrist)
Tendons are strong, but they do not like sudden load changes. If someone with diabetes begins walking long distances, starts gym activity without preparation, or does repetitive work, tendon pain can develop and persist.
Diabetic neuropathy and nerve entrapment
Neuropathy often causes burning feet and numbness. Nerve entrapment conditions (for example, in the wrist or around the ankle) can also cause pain that feels “deep” and confusing.
Serious but less common: infection or Charcot-type foot changes
If a foot becomes hot, swollen, red, and painful in a person with long-standing diabetes, we must think beyond simple arthritis. Infection, ulcers, or more complex diabetic foot changes require urgent medical evaluation.
How I evaluate joint pain in a diabetic patient
When I evaluate patients with this problem, I start by clarifying three things:
- Where exactly is the pain and what is the pattern (walking pain, night pain, stiffness, sudden swelling)?
- Is it truly a joint pain, or could it be nerve or tendon pain?
- What is the diabetes context (duration, sugar control, complications, medications, kidney issues, foot sensation)?
Then I examine movement, tenderness, swelling, stability, and strength. In many cases, basic X-rays are helpful for arthritis, while ultrasound or MRI is reserved for specific suspected problems such as tendon tears, meniscus tears, or unusual swelling.
In Bangladesh, I also discuss practical realities. Not every patient can do frequent tests or repeated hospital visits. So we try to choose the most helpful investigations first, not the most expensive list of tests.
