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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How to Maintain a Healthy Immune System

There are so many things that we have little control over. We can't control what genes we get, how old we are, or what viruses are circulating in our environment, but there is a lot we can do to prevent illness. Remarkably, many of the same habits that protect you from diseases like diabetes, cancer, and heart disease also help your immune system fight infections.

Most viruses can't hurt you until they get inside your body. So, we can help our immune system if we avoid viruses and cut off the ways they travel. Viruses can spread through the air, but not usually for very far. Keep your distance—at least 6 feet—from others, and be a good neighbor by wearing a mask in all public areas.

Viruses that cause the most common illnesses—respiratory infections, including the common cold, flu, and the new COVID-19—travel into the body through your mouth, nose, and eyes and make their way to the areas they infect, like the lungs. The best way to break this chain is to clean your hands frequently, and don't touch your face with hands that have touched anything else. In addition, you can reduce the number of viruses in your environment by cleaning frequently touched objects with a bleach- or alcohol-based cleaner.

Vaccinations are your next line of defense. Immunizations, like the flu shot, introduce a small and harmless part of a virus or bacteria. The vaccine gives your immune system an opportunity to make antibodies against the virus. A vaccinated immune system responds more quickly and effectively when illnesses are introduced. What's more, when we all get vaccinated, we decrease the likelihood that anyone will get sick. If you are unsure about whether you or your children are up to date on their vaccinations, call your primary care provider’s office.

Your third line of defense is living a healthy lifestyle. It is clear that the same things that help the rest of our bodies function also improve the strength of our immune response. Likewise, things that hinder our bodies' ability to function compromise the immune system.

Regular exercise might be the most powerful way to maintain a healthy immune system. By increasing heart rate and blood flow, we allow the cells and substances of the immune system to move through the body freely and do their job efficiently. Similarly, things that slow the movement of cells and substances, like smoking or drinking alcohol in excess, may decrease the body’s ability to function and decreases the immune response, as well.

Getting adequate sleep may also positively affect the immune response. Chronic sleep deprivation has been shown to decrease the beneficial boost in immunity from vaccinations.

Our emotional state, too—whether we are stressed, lonely, or depressed, for instance—affects our immune response so much that a relatively new specialty called psychoneuroimmunology now studies the connection. One pioneering study, conducted in the early 1980s, found that college students operating within a stressful 3-day exam period had fewer of the cells that fight tumors and viral infections. In simple terms, the students almost stopped producing immunity boosters and infection fighters.

Finally, physicians have concluded that eating a mostly plant-based diet—including fruits, vegetables, beans, nuts, whole grains, and lean protein—supports overall health and may also support immunity. Nutritious foods include important vitamins that the immune system needs to function, such as beta carotene, vitamin C, vitamin D, and zinc. Note, however, that supplements that claim to improve immune function have not yet been shown to do so to the extent necessary to protect against infection and disease. It is better to eat whole foods that are rich in vitamins rather than take supplements.

Always consult with your provider before making changes to your exercise plan or trying a new supplement and if you have any medical concerns. Physicians and the other professionals working in their offices also provide help for developing a plan for a healthier life. Call your primary care office or 802-447-5007 to find a primary care provider.

Healthy habits, like those that protect your body from disease and infection, are not always easy to adopt or maintain. Perhaps knowing just how important they are to maintaining a healthy immune response will provide the extra motivation necessary to make them a priority.

Kim Fodor, MD, is an internal medicine physician at SVMC Internal Medicine.

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