There are topical non-steroidal anti-inflammatory creams available, such as Voltarol or Ibuprofen, but I am not allowed to used then (or any other N-SAID) due to another condition.Hi y'all. I have had arthritis for the past eight years or so? that at times has become very severe - particularly in my left ankle joint. I was seen, via the national health system, for the arthritis in my finger joints, but due to the odd way of dissecting and treating body parts (imho) - the osteoarthritis expert could not also deal with my ankle at the same time. That was nine months ago, and I have not been called back for my ankle.
My ankle pain has since gotten very bad at times. I get very concerned as I am quite physically active, and need to be able to stand and move my feet to keep that up. My dillema is - I don't want to use steroids (via injection into the joint), due to my T2D, as I would be very surprised if steroids did not dramatically affect my blood glucose, as steroids are wont to do. It takes a long time and lots of hard work for me to bring my blood glucose levels back down after medical interventions that raise them, so I am loathe to do the steroid route. But is there another option? Has anyone else had effective treatment against foot and ankle pain that is not via a steroid injection? Or if they have had that shot, how did it affect their blood glucose levels and regulation?
Any and all experiences and advice much appreciated!
Hi there is a capsicum based cream that can be used for arthritis or joint pain, it does take some getting used to, but works well.
Alternatively have you tried tens machine or chiropractor? Husband uses these to manage his arthritis.
Voltaren is a NSAID. I think you might mean creams containing Capsaicin which give a deep heat effect.Have you tried any "deep heat" type creams? Some people find they help, others don't.
I think voltaren is one you can get here, but there are probably other brands.
I will follow this thread with interest (Husband has arthritis, I probably do).
If the problem is that the joints have lost so much cartilage that bone is rubbing on bone, collagen is unlikely to help. People swear by stuff like Chondroitin, which may help if joint damage isn’t too severe. Often supplied as Glucosamine and Chondroitin supplements. However, if bone is rubbing on bone due to severe cartilage loss, the only real remedy is joint replacement surgery.Coming back from a wee hike, I had to give my poor ol ankle time out - it hung in there for about an hour and a half, but the last fifteen minutes -. eeee ouch! Anyway, next to a very pretty stream was a park bench already occupied by an older chappie and his dog. I apologised for sitting next to them (a cultural no no in small town Aotearoa/NZ), explaining I had to sit down right away, and would not be able to make it to that empty park pench over there, due to the beep beep painful nature of my poor old arthritic ankle. (I was taking off the compression band to rub in the Voltaren cream I now don't go on longer walks/hikes without.) (It only lasted as pain relief for about five or ten minutes, alas.)
He told me he and his wife use collagen, as in taking it internally, and it worked wonders on their arthritis. Pro-Collagen, he said, and that it was pretty expensive. I looked it up online, and it does look quite promising, for supplements at least. But the online info was all promotional. (And yes, pretty darned pricey!) One even provided a PubMed study supporting it. (I didn't get around to reading the study.)
Has anyone had positive or otherwise experiences with taking Collagen in some form to battle very painful arthritis?
I hope you get satisfaction, but it’s difficult to quantify the amount of cartilage left, I paid for my own MRI because it’s quite difficult to get one just now on the NHS in my area. It will show loss of cartilage as narrowing of joint space. Unfortunately I have no idea how they estimate exactly how much needs lost before they do something. I’ve been referred for an emergency orthopaedic opinion, which I’m told will take 8 weeks!Thanks for that @Zilsniggy, I had a strong suspicion that was the case.
The pain absolutely feels like bone against bone. And my walking is on time limits now, and hiking, very sadly, is out. Depressing to hear, but important to know.
I had to put up a fuss to be put back on a waiting list to see a specialist that I mysteriously was dropped from, so who knows what will happen. (My poor old country right now is having a massive health care crisis. Along with a cost of living crisis. I understand this is shared with other countries around the world.) When I finally get to see that specialist - hopefully I will hear about the amount of cartilage left.
Hi y'all. I have had arthritis for the past eight years or so? that at times has become very severe - particularly in my left ankle joint. I was seen, via the national health system, for the arthritis in my finger joints, but due to the odd way of dissecting and treating body parts (imho) - the osteoarthritis expert could not also deal with my ankle at the same time. That was nine months ago, and I have not been called back for my ankle.
My ankle pain has since gotten very bad at times. I get very concerned as I am quite physically active, and need to be able to stand and move my feet to keep that up. My dillema is - I don't want to use steroids (via injection into the joint), due to my T2D, as I would be very surprised if steroids did not dramatically affect my blood glucose, as steroids are wont to do. It takes a long time and lots of hard work for me to bring my blood glucose levels back down after medical interventions that raise them, so I am loathe to do the steroid route. But is there another option? Has anyone else had effective treatment against foot and ankle pain that is not via a steroid injection? Or if they have had that shot, how did it affect their blood glucose levels and regulation?
Any and all experiences and advice much appreciated!
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