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Osteoarthritis Treatment in Dhaka

When I speak with patients in Dhaka about osteoarthritis, one of the first things I clarify is that osteoarthritis is not simply “normal aging pain.” It is a real joint condition in which cartilage gradually breaks down, movement becomes less smooth, and the joint may become painful, stiff, swollen, and less reliable during daily activity.[1][2] In Bangladesh, I often see patients come for treatment only after the pain starts interfering with stairs, prayer posture, walking outdoors, standing in the kitchen, or commuting in traffic. By that stage, the problem is often already affecting quality of life in a major way.

The good news is that osteoarthritis treatment in Dhaka does not always mean surgery. In my practice, I usually explain that treatment should be stepwise, realistic, and tailored to the stage of the disease, the joint involved, the patient’s weight, activity needs, pain pattern, and response to earlier treatment. Many patients improve with a combination of lifestyle changes, exercise, medication, and proper guidance. Surgery becomes relevant only when non-surgical treatment is no longer giving enough relief or function.[2][3]

What Osteoarthritis Means

Osteoarthritis is a degenerative joint disease. The cushioning cartilage at the ends of bones becomes worn, rough, and less protective. Over time, the joint may also develop inflammation, reduced movement, grinding, swelling, and bony changes.[1] In weight-bearing joints such as the knee and hip, this can make daily life increasingly difficult.

In Dhaka, the most common situations I see include:

  • knee osteoarthritis in middle-aged and older adults
  • joint pain that becomes worse with walking and stairs
  • morning or post-rest stiffness
  • pain after long sitting
  • swelling after overuse
  • reduced confidence in movement

Osteoarthritis often develops gradually, but some patients worsen faster if they have obesity, previous joint injury, repeated overloading, malalignment, or long-term weakness around the joint.[1][4]

Common Symptoms That Bring Patients for Treatment

Patients with osteoarthritis usually do not come with only “pain.” They often describe a combination of problems:

  • aching or mechanical pain during movement
  • stiffness, especially after rest
  • swelling after activity
  • creaking or grinding sensation
  • reduced bending or straightening
  • difficulty walking longer distances
  • trouble climbing stairs
  • difficulty getting up from the floor or chair

MedlinePlus notes that common symptoms include pain with movement, stiffness especially after rest, swelling, less movement in the joint, and sometimes instability.[1] These patterns are very familiar in the Dhaka patient population.

Why Proper Osteoarthritis Treatment Matters

One important point I want Bangladeshi patients to understand is that untreated osteoarthritis often leads to more than pain. It can reduce mobility, disturb sleep, weaken muscles, limit independence, and push patients into inactivity, which then worsens the problem further. NIAMS emphasizes that treatment aims not only to reduce pain, but also to improve movement, strength, and day-to-day function.[2]

Treatment also matters because osteoarthritis symptoms are not always caused by cartilage wear alone. Some patients have associated meniscus changes, deformity, stiffness, swelling, or severe muscle weakness. If we treat only pain and ignore the rest, outcomes are often disappointing.

How I Assess Osteoarthritis in Dhaka Practice

Before discussing treatment, I try to understand exactly what kind of osteoarthritis problem the patient has.

Clinical Assessment

I usually assess:

  • which joint is involved
  • pain pattern and severity
  • stiffness duration
  • swelling
  • walking tolerance
  • stair difficulty
  • alignment changes
  • muscle weakness
  • movement range
  • effect on sleep and routine activities

Imaging and Diagnostic Workup

X-rays are often very helpful for identifying joint space loss, deformity, and arthritic changes. Lab tests may be used when the presentation suggests another type of arthritis. NIAMS also notes that blood tests or joint fluid analysis may be needed to rule out other causes such as infection or gout in selected cases.[2]

This matters because “joint pain” is not always osteoarthritis, and “osteoarthritis” is not always the only reason a patient has severe symptoms.

Non-Surgical Osteoarthritis Treatment in Dhaka

In most patients, treatment should begin with non-surgical methods. AAOS and NIAMS both support a conservative first-line approach for knee osteoarthritis and related osteoarthritis management.[2][3][4]

Exercise and Physiotherapy

Exercise is one of the most important treatments. NIAMS recommends range-of-motion, strengthening, low-impact aerobic activity, balance work, and stretching as part of osteoarthritis care.[2]

In my practice, I often recommend:

  • quadriceps strengthening
  • hip and core strengthening
  • range-of-motion work
  • low-impact walking or cycling
  • balance training
  • guided physiotherapy when pain or weakness is significant

For Bangladeshi patients, this is especially important because many people reduce activity out of fear. Too much rest weakens the muscles around the joint and can worsen stiffness and pain over time.

Weight Management

For knee and hip osteoarthritis, body weight has a major effect on symptoms. NIAMS and MedlinePlus both note that weight reduction can reduce pain and stress on weight-bearing joints.[1][2] In Dhaka, even modest weight loss can make a meaningful difference in stair pain and walking tolerance.

Activity Modification

This does not mean complete rest. It means reducing repeated stress that worsens symptoms while staying active in a joint-friendly way. I usually explain that patients may need to:

  • limit repeated deep squatting
  • avoid unnecessary stair climbing during flare-ups
  • reduce prolonged standing when possible
  • pace long walking or market trips
  • use supportive footwear

Joint Care by Dr. Md. Iftekharul Alam

Braces, Orthotics, and Walking Aids

Some patients benefit from a cane, brace, or properly fitted support device. NIAMS notes that braces or orthotics may help stabilize joints, and AAOS guidance also supports selected mechanical support approaches in appropriate cases.[2][4]

Medication Options

Medication can help, but it should be part of a broader plan, not the only treatment.

Topical and Oral Medicines

NIAMS and AAOS patient guidance include oral pain relievers, oral anti-inflammatory medicines, and topical preparations among common treatment options.[2][3] These may help patients stay functional enough to continue exercise and rehabilitation.

However, long-term use is not always safe for everyone. Patients with kidney disease, stomach ulcers, heart disease, diabetes, or older age need careful selection and monitoring of medicines.

Injections

Corticosteroid injections into the joint may provide short-term pain relief in selected cases.[2][5] They are not the answer for every patient, but they can sometimes help reduce inflammation and allow better function or rehabilitation.

On the other hand, AAOS plain-language guidance notes that hyaluronic acid is not recommended for knee osteoarthritis in their guideline summary.[5] This is important because many patients assume every injection is equally useful, which is not the case.

What Osteoarthritis Treatment Looks Like in Real Dhaka Patients

In practical terms, treatment often depends on severity.

Mild to Early Osteoarthritis

Patients may do well with:

  • diagnosis and education
  • exercise and physiotherapy
  • weight management
  • periodic medicine support
  • movement modification

Moderate Osteoarthritis

These patients often need a more structured plan:

  • supervised rehabilitation
  • stronger pain control strategy
  • gait advice
  • brace or cane in selected cases
  • injection in carefully selected situations
  • closer follow-up if function is slipping

Advanced Osteoarthritis

When patients have severe pain, deformity, major stiffness, night pain, or daily disability despite non-surgical care, surgery may become the right option.

When Surgery Becomes Part of Osteoarthritis Treatment

I usually discuss surgery only after we are confident that reasonable non-surgical treatment is no longer enough, or when the joint damage is clearly advanced.

AAOS states that when exercise, medication, and other non-operative measures fail to give adequate relief and the patient continues to have pain and difficulty with daily activities, surgical treatment should be considered.[5]

Osteotomy

In some younger or selected patients with one-sided knee damage and alignment-related overload, osteotomy may reduce pressure on the damaged part of the joint.[3]

Partial or Total Joint Replacement

For advanced osteoarthritis, partial or total joint replacement may become appropriate depending on the joint and pattern of damage.[2][3][5]

In my practice, I try to set realistic expectations. The goal of surgery is not perfection. The goal is meaningful pain relief, improved function, and a better quality of life when the joint has reached a stage where non-surgical treatment no longer serves the patient well.

Dhaka-Specific Considerations for Patients

Local lifestyle matters when planning treatment. In Dhaka, many patients want to know whether they will be able to:

  • walk safely in traffic-heavy environments
  • climb stairs at home
  • pray more comfortably
  • travel to work
  • continue household duties
  • avoid becoming dependent on family members

These concerns are valid. Good osteoarthritis treatment should be individualized to the patient’s real life, not just to an X-ray report.

I also advise patients not to compare themselves too much with relatives or neighbors who “have the same arthritis.” The stage of damage, stiffness, alignment, weight, muscle strength, and medical conditions can make two patients with the same diagnosis behave very differently.

When You Should Seek Earlier Review

You should seek proper assessment sooner if:

  • pain is getting worse month by month
  • stiffness is increasing
  • walking distance is falling
  • the joint is swelling repeatedly
  • sleep is affected
  • the knee or hip feels unstable
  • painkillers are becoming a daily dependency

Earlier review helps us intervene before weakness, deformity, or severe disability become more difficult to manage.

A Practical Treatment Mindset

I usually explain osteoarthritis treatment in Dhaka this way: start early, stay active intelligently, protect the joint, strengthen the surrounding muscles, use medicines carefully, and escalate treatment only when needed. Many patients can delay progression and maintain useful function with a disciplined conservative plan. Others may ultimately need surgery, but even then the best results usually come when the body is prepared properly beforehand.

The most effective osteoarthritis treatment is not a single medicine or a single injection. It is a complete plan built around diagnosis, physical function, lifestyle, rehabilitation, and realistic expectations.

Related Topics

References

  1. MedlinePlus. Osteoarthritis. https://medlineplus.gov/osteoarthritis.html
  2. NIAMS. Osteoarthritis: Diagnosis, Treatment, and Steps to Take. https://www.niams.nih.gov/health-topics/osteoarthritis/diagnosis-treatment-and-steps-to-take
  3. AAOS OrthoInfo. Arthritis of the Knee. https://orthoinfo.aaos.org/en/diseases–conditions/arthritis-of-the-knee/
  4. AAOS OrthoInfo. Osteoarthritis. https://orthoinfo.aaos.org/en/diseases–conditions/osteoarthritis
  5. AAOS Plain Language Summary. The Management of Osteoarthritis of the Knee (Surgical and Non-Surgical). https://orthoinfo.aaos.org/globalassets/pdfs/the-management-of-osteoarthritis-of-the-knee-pls_final.pdf

FAQs BY PATIENTS

The best treatment depends on the stage of the disease and the joint involved. Many patients improve with exercise, physiotherapy, weight management, medicines, and activity modification. Surgery is considered when these measures no longer provide enough relief.

Yes. Many patients can be managed for a long time without surgery through a structured non-surgical plan that includes exercise, weight control, and symptom management.[2][3]

In some selected patients, corticosteroid injections may help with short-term pain relief. They are not the best answer for everyone, and their role depends on symptoms, joint condition, and the wider treatment plan.[2][5]

Yes. Reducing body weight can lower the load on weight-bearing joints and often improves pain and mobility, especially in knee osteoarthritis.[1][2]

Joint replacement becomes a serious option when pain, stiffness, and disability remain significant despite good non-surgical treatment, and when the arthritis is advanced enough to interfere with daily life regularly.[3][5]

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