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Osteoarthritis can cause painful joint
movement. A joint is where two bones meet. A synovial joint is
surrounded by a tough capsule that protects and supports it. The
joint capsule is lined with a synovial membrane. This membrane
produces a slippery fluid. Within the joint capsule, the ends of the
two bones are covered with a smooth elastic tissue known as
cartilage. This prevents your bones from rubbing and grinding against
each other. Cartilage acts as a shock absorber as well, cushioning
the ends of your bones and distributing stress evenly across your
bones. When pieces of bone and cartilage break off and float around a
joint, this can cause pain as soft tissue is disturbed. As cartilage
wears down and bones rub together, more pain is produced.
Osteoarthritis can cause painful
fractures. Fractures will usually heal within three months, relieving
the pain. If the pain continues beyond that time it is considered to
be chronic pain. Chronic pain is often associated with a verterbral
facture. Often intense pain and muscle spasms will persist long after
the actual fracture is healed.
Osteoporosis can be a cause of fatigue
that results from the disease process. This makes the pain seem even
more unbearable and every movement more difficult. Depression can
also result from the lack of mobility and inability to do what you
were once capable of.
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