Examples
Injected
| Generic Name | Brand Name |
|---|
| betamethasone | Celestone |
| methylprednisolone | Depo-Medrol |
| triamcinolone | Aristospan, Kenalog |
Intra-articular corticosteroids or steroids are medicines
injected directly into the joint space of a painful, inflamed arthritic joint.
Steroids taken by mouth (orally) are not used for
osteoarthritis.
How It Works
Steroids are similar to natural
substances produced by the body (hormones) that
help reduce inflammation. If inflammation is not a symptom of your
osteoarthritis, steroids are less likely to be helpful.
Steroids
may be used to reduce inflammation in tendons and ligaments in osteoarthritic
joints.
Why It Is Used
If a person has not improved with
treatment using
analgesics or
nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), an
injection of corticosteroid into the joint can sometimes be helpful for
short-term pain relief.
How Well It Works
Corticosteroids may relieve pain
caused by osteoarthritis for a short amount of time (weeks to months).1
If corticosteroid injections are helpful,
symptoms may improve for weeks to months. Some people get long-term relief of 6
months or more with a single cortisone shot. If you have a moderate amount of
fluid in the joint, your chances of responding are probably better.
Side Effects
Corticosteroids are used with caution
because of potential side effects. Side effects may include:
- Increased pain the first day or two after a corticosteroid
injection. Applying ice at home for 15 to 20 minutes after the injection may
help reduce pain.
- Tendon weakening and scarring, causing loss of
strength and movement and potential for tendon rupture.
- Accidental
nerve injury during injection.
- Skin color (pigmentation)
changes.
- Dimpling of the skin (subcutaneous
atrophy).
- Infection.
See Drug Reference for a full list of side effects. (Drug
Reference is not available in all systems.)
Common short-term side
effects include:
Uncommon short-term side effects include:
Long-term side effects include:
See Drug Reference for a full list of side effects. (Drug
Reference is not available in all systems.)
What To Think About
There are several issues to think
about with steroid injections for osteoarthritis.
The standard of
practice is that steroid injections should be given only 3 or 4 times a year in
a single joint area.
A small study suggests that injections every
3 months for up to 2 years is safe and effective in reducing symptoms of
osteoarthritis.2
Injection of any
substance into a joint or tendon has a very small risk of harm, including
damage to a tendon, ligament, or nerve; bleeding into the tissue; or infection.
Although these rarely happen, your doctor will probably mention the
possibilities to you before an injection into a joint.
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