Rheumatoid Arthritis: Symptoms, Stages, Diagnosis & Treatment- By Dr. Balaraju Naidu, Robotic Orthopedic Surgeon, ONUS Robotic Hospitals

Rheumatoid Arthritis: Symptoms, Stages, Diagnosis & Treatment- By Dr. Balaraju Naidu, Robotic Orthopedic Surgeon, ONUS Robotic Hospitals

Rheumatoid Arthritis, also called RA, is a long-term autoimmune joint disease where the body’s immune system attacks the joints by mistake. It can cause joint pain, swelling, stiffness, warmth, redness, and difficulty in movement.

RA commonly affects the small joints of the hands, wrists, fingers, knees, ankles, and feet. One important sign is morning stiffness, especially when it lasts for a long time. If ignored, RA can slowly damage the joints and affect daily activities.

The CDC states that RA causes pain, swelling, and stiffness in the joints, and early diagnosis and treatment are important to avoid joint damage and worsening symptoms.

In this video, Dr. Balaraju Naidu, Consultant Robotic Orthopedic Surgeon at ONUS Robotic Hospitals, explains the symptoms, stages, diagnosis, and treatment options for Rheumatoid Arthritis.

What Is Rheumatoid Arthritis?

Rheumatoid Arthritis is an autoimmune condition. Normally, the immune system protects the body from infections. In RA, the immune system mistakenly attacks the lining of the joints, causing inflammation.

Over time, this inflammation can damage cartilage, bone, ligaments, and tendons. Mayo Clinic notes that RA can also affect other parts of the body, including the skin, eyes, lungs, heart, and blood vessels.

Early Symptoms of Rheumatoid Arthritis

RA symptoms may start slowly and may come and go in the early stage. Many patients initially feel mild joint pain, swelling, or stiffness and may ignore it.

Common early symptoms include:

Joint pain
Joint swelling
Morning stiffness
Warmth around joints
Redness around joints
Pain in fingers, wrists, knees, ankles, or feet
Fatigue
Difficulty gripping objects
Difficulty walking or climbing stairs
Pain in multiple joints
Symptoms on both sides of the body

RA often starts in the small joints of the hands, wrists, and feet before affecting larger joints. Mayo Clinic reports that early RA usually affects smaller joints first, especially the joints that attach fingers to hands and toes to feet.

Morning Stiffness: An Important Warning Sign

Morning stiffness is one of the most important clues for inflammatory arthritis like RA. If stiffness lasts for a long time after waking up and improves with movement, it should not be ignored.

Morning stiffness may be felt in:

Fingers
Wrists
Hands
Knees
Ankles
Feet
Shoulders
Elbows

RA-related stiffness is usually more persistent than simple muscle stiffness. It may interfere with daily activities such as holding a cup, opening a door, walking, writing, or using a mobile phone.

Difference Between RA and Normal Arthritis

Many people confuse Rheumatoid Arthritis with age-related arthritis. But both are different.

Rheumatoid Arthritis

Autoimmune disease
Can affect younger and middle-aged adults
Often affects small joints first
Usually affects both sides of the body
Morning stiffness is common and lasts longer
Swelling and warmth are common
Can damage joints if untreated
May affect other organs

Osteoarthritis / Age-Related Arthritis

Usually due to wear and tear
Common with aging
Often affects weight-bearing joints
Pain may increase with activity
Morning stiffness is usually shorter
Swelling may be less inflammatory
Usually limited to joints

Correct diagnosis is important because RA needs early medical treatment to control inflammation and protect the joints.


Stages of Rheumatoid Arthritis

RA can progress gradually if not treated properly.

Stage 1: Early RA

In the early stage, joint inflammation begins. Pain, swelling, and stiffness may be present, but X-rays may not show major joint damage.

Stage 2: Moderate RA

Inflammation may begin to damage cartilage. Joint movement can become painful and limited. Swelling and stiffness may become more frequent.

Stage 3: Severe RA

Cartilage and bone damage may become more visible. Patients may develop joint deformity, reduced movement, weakness, and difficulty in daily activities.

Stage 4: End-Stage RA

Inflammation may reduce, but joint damage, stiffness, deformity, and loss of function may remain. In some patients, joint replacement or corrective surgery may be needed.

The goal of treatment is to diagnose RA early and prevent progression to advanced stages.

When Joint Pain Becomes Serious

Joint pain should not be ignored if it is repeated, persistent, or associated with swelling and stiffness.

Consult a doctor if you have:

Morning stiffness lasting for a long time
Pain in multiple joints
Joint swelling
Warmth or redness around joints
Pain in both hands or both feet
Difficulty gripping objects
Difficulty walking
Fatigue with joint pain
Joint deformity
Pain not improving with routine medicines
Family history of autoimmune disease

Early treatment lowers the risk of permanent joint damage. Cleveland Clinic notes that prompt RA treatment reduces the risk of permanent, painful joint damage.

Diagnosis of Rheumatoid Arthritis

RA diagnosis is based on symptoms, physical examination, blood tests, and imaging. The doctor may examine joint swelling, tenderness, stiffness, deformity, movement, grip strength, and walking ability.

Diagnosis may include:

Detailed medical history
Joint examination
Blood tests
X-rays
Ultrasound in selected cases
MRI in selected cases
Evaluation by rheumatology and orthopedic teams when needed

The CDC mentions that doctors diagnose RA through physical exam, X-rays, lab tests, and review of health history.

Blood Tests for RA

Blood tests help confirm inflammation and autoimmune markers.

Common tests include:

Rheumatoid Factor
Anti-CCP antibodies
ESR
CRP
Complete blood count
Liver and kidney function before medicines
Vitamin D and other supportive tests when needed

Mayo Clinic states that people with RA often have elevated ESR or CRP, which may show inflammation, and other blood tests look for rheumatoid factor and anti-CCP antibodies.

Anti-CCP is an important test because it can support diagnosis and may suggest more aggressive disease in some patients. The NHS notes that people who test positive for both rheumatoid factor and anti-CCP may be more likely to have severe RA requiring higher levels of treatment.

Treatment Options for Rheumatoid Arthritis

RA treatment focuses on controlling inflammation, reducing pain, protecting joints, maintaining movement, and preventing deformity.

Treatment may include:

Pain relief medicines
Anti-inflammatory medicines
Disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs
Biological medicines in selected cases
Steroids for short-term control when needed
Physiotherapy
Joint protection techniques
Exercise and strengthening
Lifestyle correction
Regular follow-up
Surgery in advanced joint damage

Medical literature describes the goals of RA treatment as reducing joint inflammation and pain, maximizing joint function, and preventing joint destruction and deformity.

Role of Physiotherapy and Lifestyle Care

Physiotherapy helps maintain joint movement, muscle strength, posture, walking ability, and daily function.

Helpful lifestyle steps include:

Regular low-impact exercise
Joint-friendly strengthening
Weight management
Balanced diet
Smoking cessation
Adequate sleep
Stress control
Avoiding long inactivity
Using supports or splints if advised
Regular follow-up and medicine compliance

Exercise should be done under guidance, especially when joints are swollen or painful.

When Surgery or Joint Replacement May Be Needed

Most RA patients are treated with medicines and lifestyle care. But if RA causes severe joint damage, deformity, pain, or loss of function, surgery may be considered.

Surgery may be needed for:

Severe knee damage
Severe hip damage
Advanced joint deformity
Tendon damage
Severe pain not controlled by medicines
Difficulty walking
Loss of daily function
Joint instability

Surgical options may include synovectomy, tendon repair, deformity correction, arthroscopy in selected cases, or joint replacement for severely damaged joints.

Why Early Treatment Matters

RA is not just β€œnormal joint pain.” It is an autoimmune disease that can progress if ignored.

Early treatment can help:

Reduce pain
Control swelling
Prevent joint damage
Maintain movement
Protect daily function
Reduce deformity risk
Improve quality of life
Delay or avoid surgery

Do not delay consultation if you have repeated joint pain with morning stiffness or swelling.

Expert Arthritis & Joint Care at ONUS Robotic Hospitals

At ONUS Robotic Hospitals, patients with Rheumatoid Arthritis, joint pain, knee pain, hand pain, arthritis, swelling, stiffness, deformity, and advanced joint damage receive expert evaluation and personalized care.


For Appointments:

Dr. Balaraju Naidu, Robotic Orthopedic Surgeon

ONUS Robotic Hospitals – Hyderabad

πŸ‘‰ link: contact-us or book-appointment

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