How to Manage Your Arthritis this Winter
Grace Weatherby
/ Categories: WELLNESS, 2023

How to Manage Your Arthritis this Winter

For many of the 54.4 million U.S. adults living with arthritis, winter can be no fun.

Thanks to plunging temperatures, the synovial fluid that normally helps joints move freely, tends to thicken. The result is joints that feel stiff and sensitive. Again, no fun.

Fortunately, there are things you can do relieve some of the pain and stiffness of arthritis in winter. Here’s where to start:

Keep warm: Heat works to ‘thin’ the fluid in your joints so that movement comes easier and loosens the surrounding muscles and tissues, which also helps with movement. If you’re heading outside, be sure to bundle up all over. When you warm your core, you also warm your blood. That warm, circulating blood helps keep arthritic joints pain-free. If you’re chilled inside, use blankets or heating pads to warm affected joints and your core.

Stay active: Even though your joints maybe telling you to sit still, the truth is this: the single best thing you can do to prevent arthritis pain at any time of year is keep moving. Exercise, indoors or out, will work to warm your joints and lessen discomfort. Again, if you’re headed outside, dress accordingly.

Stretch often: While it’s tempting to stay tucked under a blanket all day, be sure to stretch and move all the parts of your body throughout the day to keep from getting stiff. If you’re a television-watcher, let commercial breaks serve as your cue to stand up and stretch. From wrist and ankle rolls to toe touches and side bends, regularly gentle stretching will keep your joints loose and comfortable.

Enjoy an ‘arthritis diet’:  Research shows that a Mediterranean-style diet can help fight inflammation and improve joint pain and other symptoms. If you’re diet doesn’t already include these foods, consider adding them: Fish, Nuts & seeds, Olive oil, Beans, Whole grains, Turmeric and Fruits & vegetable, especially blueberries, cherries, spinach, kale, and broccoli. 

Maintain a healthy weight: Whether it’s 10 pounds or 50, carrying extra weight increases the burden and pressure on your joints. Maintaining a healthy weight works to decrease pain and improve joint function. While weight loss is a tough endeavor, it provides many positive effects on your overall health—including relief from the pain of arthritis, a reduced risk of heart disease and diabetes and more.

Medicate as needed: Over-the-counter pain medications, like acetaminophen (such as Tylenol) and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs, such as Advil or Motrin), can provide short-term relief from symptoms of arthritis. However, it’s important to discuss your options with your doctor, especially if you’re taking other drugs for arthritis or other conditions.

If you’re still struggling with pain after implementing these changes, contact your doctor to discuss other treatment strategies.

 

Michaela M. Schneiderbauer, MD, MBA, is an orthopedic surgeon with SVMC Orthopedics and Dartmouth-Hitchcock Putnam Physicians.

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Home Office How To

Did you know that many sources of chronic pain start in a poorly arranged office? Carpal tunnel, pinched nerves, overuse injuries can often be traced to chairs being positioned improperly or important tools being positioned outside easy reach. While reaching or straining once or twice wouldn't hurt us at all, doing so repeatedly day after day can cause painful and lasting injuries.

As an occupational health physician at Southwestern Vermont Medical Center, one of my responsibilities is to help employees of SVMC and other companies who have workplace injuries and recommend the adjustments they should make.

During a spike in work-from-home arrangements, I have heard about friends’ and family members' work-from-home set-ups. Some are working from laptops on their couches. Others are set up at kitchen tables. We know that their cats walk across their keyboards and their kids interrupt. Especially since Governor Scott has just indicated that remote workers will likely be the last to return to the traditional workplace, it's time to get our home office arrangements figured out.

That's why I would like to share the important details you need to arrange a healthful workspace and encourage all to invest the time (and sometimes a little bit of money) needed to implement them. Learning these points is key to avoiding injuries, as continued work-from-home policies, where feasible, will help maintain appropriate distancing needed to decrease the spread of COVID-19.

An adjustable chair is the first and most important component of an office set-up. Office chairs include crucial lumbar support and encourage good posture. When your forearms are resting on your desk or table, adjust the chair height up or down until your arms form a right angle. This is an important step in avoiding wrist pain and carpal tunnel, two of the most common office injuries. If, when your arms are in the correct position, your feet are not touching the floor, employ a footstool.

Position your monitor an arm’s length away. (If you can't see the screen from this distance, better go get an eye exam!) And raise the screen so that the top of the screen is eye level. This, too, will encourage good posture.

If you use two monitors, positioning them properly depends on how you use them. If you use them equally, the dividing line between them should be right in front of you. If you use one primarily and the other secondarily, position the more dominant screen directly in front of you. If you use a laptop, consider investing in a riser and an additional keyboard needed to raise the screen to eye level.

Put all of your other tools, including your mouse and phone, within easy reach. If you use the phone a lot, consider investing in a headset.

The only other recommendation I make is to stretch every 15 – 20 minutes. A list of helpful office-oriented stretches is available here. And every hour, be sure to get up and take a short walk or standing stretch.

If you follow these recommendations at home, you will be much more comfortable and are likely to be more productive, too, all while maintaining the social distance we need to keep COVID-19 infections low throughout this next phase of the pandemic. Most importantly, you will save yourself the pain and discomfort of office injury no matter where you're working.

Mark Zimpfer, MD, is a physician at Southwestern Vermont Medical Center's Occupational Health practice. 

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