Verified By Dr Pereddy Somashekara Reddy November 20, 2023
6296If you suffer from arthritis, you feel that anything you do to ease the pain and stiffness is a welcome relief. You must have heard people advise you to use heat therapy to relieve the pain. Many doctors also suggest both heat and cold therapies to ease the pain and stiffness of the bones and joints. But heat therapy is more popular option of combatting this condition. So, here is the insight into this treatment for arthritis.
Heat therapy is an inexpensive but effective way of treating arthritis-related aches and pains. It is a form of applying heat to the affected joints. It can help to alleviate the pain, stiffness and swelling. Heat helps to relax the muscles and improve blood flow in the muscles and joints. A person can use heat therapy right at the start of the day to loosen up an osteoarthritic knee. It is often used in combination with cold therapy. But it can be used by itself too.
Heat therapy works by stimulating your body’s own healing force. You can use dry heat such as, heating pads or heat lamps in this therapy, or moist heat like heated wash cloths or warm baths. This is how heat therapy helps:
When you are using heat therapy, it is important to take care that the temperature is not so hot that it burns the skin. You need to decide on a temperature which you can comfortably tolerate – whether you are using a bath, or spa or a hot bottle. As for the application, you need to give it time to work. It also depends on where the pain is located. For the heat
therapy to be effective, it needs to penetrate down into the affected muscles and joint tissues. Too brief a session will only warm the skin and do no real work. Minor to moderate joint pain in places close to the skin’s surface requires about 15 to 20 minutes of therapy. Deeper injuries in the hip or lower back need sessions of 30 minutes or more.
You should try to use moist heat packs at least twice a day to get the best relief. They can be used for 15 minutes before the physical therapy and then used again immediately after the exercise. A five-to-ten minutes heat massage applied to the painful area within the first 48 hours provides effective relief.
There are certain circumstances when heat therapy is not a suitable option of treatment. This therapy should not be used in the following situations:
Applying heat to an arthritic joint does wonders for this chronic condition. Here are nine common methods of applying it:
If you are an Arthritis patient who has not given a shot at heat therapy yet, it is time for you to do so. It is an easy, convenient and inexpensive way to deal with arthritis pain on a daily basis. You can use it alone or in conjunction with other therapies like physiotherapy and even cold therapy. But do remember to consult your doctor before trying any of the methods for the first time.
MBBS, M.S. Ortho, M.Ch Ortho Fellow Arthroplasty (joint replacement surgery) USA, Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon Specialist in Arthoplasty, Arthroscopy, Trauma, and Spine, Apollo Hospitals, Jubilee Hills, Hyderabad