In South Africa, osteoarthritis is managed by orthopedicss. Osteoarthritis is the most common joint disease worldwide and the leading cause of disability in older adults, affecting an estimated 595 million people globally in 2020. Unlike pure cartilage wear-and-tear, it is now understood as a whole-joint failure that involves cartilage loss, subchondral bone remodelling, osteophyte formation, synovial inflammation, and meniscal damage.
Osteoarthritis (ICD-10: M15-M19) is a chronic, progressive disorder of the synovial joint in which the entire joint organ fails — articular cartilage thins and fissures, subchondral bone remodels with sclerosis and cyst formation, marginal osteophytes grow, the synovium develops low-grade inflammation, and supporting structures including the meniscus, ligaments, and periarticular muscle deteriorate. The disease is classified as primary (idiopathic, age-related) or secondary to identifiable causes such as prior joint trauma, congenital dysplasia, inflammatory arthritis, metabolic disease, or alignment abnormalities. Common sites are the knee (tibiofemoral and patellofemoral compartments), hip, hand (first carpometacarpal joint, distal and proximal interphalangeal joints producing Heberden's and Bouchard's nodes), spinal facet joints, first metatarsophalangeal joint, and shoulder. Radiographic severity is graded 0-4 on the Kellgren-Lawrence scale based on joint space narrowing, osteophyte size, subchondral sclerosis, and bone deformity.
The key symptoms of Osteoarthritis are: Joint pain that worsens with use and weight-bearing through the day, partially relieved by rest — the hallmark feature distinguishing osteoarthritis from inflammatory arthritis., Brief morning stiffness lasting under 30 minutes, in contrast to the prolonged morning stiffness of rheumatoid arthritis or ankylosing spondylitis., Gel phenomenon — joint stiffness after sitting still for a period such as during a long car ride or movie, which eases within minutes of moving again., Crepitus, a coarse grating sensation or audible crunching when the joint moves, most commonly heard in the knee on flexion and extension., Reduced range of motion that develops gradually over years; in hip OA, loss of internal rotation is one of the earliest reproducible findings on examination., Bony enlargement of the joint margins — Heberden's nodes at the distal interphalangeal joints and Bouchard's nodes at the proximal interphalangeal joints in hand OA., Periarticular tenderness and a mild joint effusion in flares, with the joint feeling warm but rarely the red, hot, exquisitely tender presentation of crystal or septic arthritis..
Diagnosis of osteoarthritis is primarily clinical. In a patient over 45 with activity-related joint pain and morning stiffness under 30 minutes, NICE guidance (NG226, 2022) states that osteoarthritis can be diagnosed without imaging or laboratory tests. The American College of Rheumatology clinical criteria for knee OA combine joint pain with crepitus, bony enlargement, less than 30 minutes of morning stiffness, and age, reaching over 90% sensitivity. Examination identifies the affected compartments, range of motion loss, malalignment, joint line tenderness, periarticular crepitus, effusion size, and quadriceps or hip abductor weakness. A weight-bearing plain radiograph (standing for knee and hip) is the standard imaging investigation when confirmation is needed for surgical planning or to exclude another diagnosis; it shows joint space narrowing, marginal osteophytes, subchondral sclerosis, and subchondral cysts, graded 0-4 on the Kellgren-Lawrence scale. MRI is not routinely indicated; it is reserved for atypical presentations, suspected internal derangement, avascular necrosis, or persistent mechanical symptoms after failed conservative care. Blood tests are normal in primary OA, and ordering a rheumatoid factor or anti-CCP panel in classic presentations causes more confusion than it resolves due to low-titre positives in healthy older adults. Joint aspiration is reserved for a hot, swollen joint to exclude crystal arthritis or infection — synovial fluid in OA shows a non-inflammatory white cell count under 2,000/mm³.
Osteoarthritis is a chronic condition, but pain and function in most joints are controllable for many years with non-operative care, and joint replacement provides durable resolution of end-stage hip and knee disease. With structured exercise and weight management, clinically meaningful pain and function gains are achieved in roughly 60-70% of patients at 12 weeks, and benefits persist while the programme is maintained. Disease progression on imaging is slow — only about one in seven patients with knee OA progresses by one Kellgren-Lawrence grade over five years. Hip and knee replacement deliver 80-95% patient satisfaction with 10-year prosthesis survivorship over 95% in modern registries; hand and thumb base surgery have similar high success rates in selected patients. Predictors of poorer outcomes are higher BMI, lower quadriceps strength, depression, prior joint injury, and untreated metabolic disease. Multimorbidity matters: co-existing depression doubles the risk of poor functional outcomes after knee replacement, and treating mood and sleep is part of treating the joint.
Most osteoarthritis is managed by primary care, physiotherapy, and pharmacists working together. Refer to an orthopaedic surgeon when symptoms persist despite at least 12 weeks of structured exercise, weight management, and appropriate pharmacotherapy, or earlier for night pain, severe functional limitation, or Kellgren-Lawrence grade 4 disease on weight-bearing radiograph. Refer to rheumatology when there is uncertainty between OA and inflammatory arthritis, in erosive hand OA, or when systemic features are present.
Find specialists →Pain and function improve over 8-12 weeks with a structured exercise and weight-management programme and remain steady while it continues. A single intra-articular corticosteroid injection typically reduces pain for 4-8 weeks. After total knee replacement, most patients walk with aids within 1-2 days, return to most daily activities by 6-12 weeks, and reach maximum functional improvement by 12 months. Total hip replacement recovery is faster — most patients return to walking unaided within 4-6 weeks and to normal daily activities by 3 months.
All patients with knee or hip OA should be doing some structured exercise. Aim for 150 minutes per week of moderate aerobic activity such as walking, cycling, or swimming, plus two sessions of resistance training focused on quadriceps, hip abductors, and core. Pain that settles within 24 hours of exercise is acceptable and does not indicate joint damage. Aquatic exercise is particularly useful for severe knee or hip pain because buoyancy reduces joint loading. Tai chi has trial-level evidence for knee and hip OA and is suitable for older adults concerned about balance.
For surgical care, look for a fellowship-trained adult reconstruction or arthroplasty surgeon whose practice is dominated by hip and knee replacement, with documented case volumes — high-volume surgeons and high-volume centres show lower complication and revision rates. For non-operative care, look for a clinician who routinely refers to physiotherapy as the first prescription rather than the last, knows the limits of imaging, and treats weight management as a clinical priority rather than a moralised aside.
Medically reviewed by AIHealz Medical Editorial Board · May 12, 2026
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