Why Arthritis Gets Worse (The Hidden Drivers Most People Miss)

Why does arthritis seems so persistent and does not get better? We dive into possible factors and how to improve healing and reduce worsening.

Highlights

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Why some people worsen faster than others

Two people can have arthritis in the same joint and very different outcomes.

One continues moving well and recover like nothing was injured.
The other gradually becomes stiffer, weaker, and movement becomes more limited.

The difference is often not just the arthritis itself.
It is what happens after the early warning signs begin.

In many cases, arthritis worsens not because the joint suddenly fails, but because the body continues to repeat the same stress patterns that caused the problem in the first place.

 

The 3 silent accelerators that worsen arthritis

  1. Ignoring the early warning signs


The most common problem is not pain itself.

It is the patient who feels:

  • stiffness
  • discomfort
  • reduced movement


…and decides it is “not serious enough” to deal with.

They can don’t do anything to treat the problem in the beginning, and by the time they seek help, the arthritis is often very severe.

They often tell the doctor ‘I didn’t do anything and the arthritis becomes so bad’.

Yes, nothing was done to look after the body until they cannot move properly anymore.

  1. Continuing to overload the joint


Some patients know something is wrong—but continue to overload the joint anyway.

They:

  • push through pain
  • keep repeating aggravating movements
  • assume discomfort is harmless


This keeps the joint irritated and prevents recovery.

The problem is not just pain.
The problem is repeated irritation without giving the body a chance for recovery.

  1. Resigning to the condition


This is the most damaging long-term habit.

Many patients assume:

“It’s just arthritis. It comes with age.”

So they stop trying to improve.

They move less.
They weaken more.
They compensate more.
And the problem worsens faster.

 

The daily habits that quietly make arthritis worse

  1. Poor walking mechanics


Every step places load through the feet, knees, hips, and spine.

If walking mechanics are poor:

  • one side absorbs more impact
  • one knee rotates poorly
  • load is distributed unevenly


Over time, that repeated stress adds up.

This is one of the most common reasons one knee degenerates faster than the other. Chiropractic helps many patients with knee pain by helping to improve the walking mechanics, preventing many patients with mild to moderate arthritis from knee replacement surgeries.

  1. Leg crossing and asymmetrical sitting


This is one of the most overlooked habits.

Sitting cross-legged or repeatedly leaning onto one side can create:

  • pelvic imbalance
  • uneven hip loading
  • altered knee mechanics


It may feel comfortable in the moment, but over time it changes how the body loads the joints. As stated in a previous article on sitting cross legged (https://www.realhealthmedical.com.sg/blog/why-crossing-your-legs-while-sitting-isnt-the-real-problem/), alternating left and right side when crossing leg is vital to balance the asymmetry.

  1. Excessive exercise


More movement is not always better.

Many patients assume:

“If movement is good, more movement must be better.”

But excessive bending, squatting, walking up and down stairs and repetitive exercise can continue to irritate an already overloaded joint.

The issue is not movement. The issue is poor load management.
 

What happens when one side hurts

When one joint is not functioning well, the body naturally shifts load to the other side.

That creates a chain reaction:

  • leaning more onto the “good” side
  • the “good” knee takes more load
  • the pelvis begins to tilt
  • the spine starts to compensate
  • muscles on one side become tighter and more fatigued


Over time:

  • the original problem remains
  • the “good” side becomes overloaded
  • new pain begins elsewhere


If nothing changes, one bad knee can eventually become two.

 

What I often find on assessment

The first things I commonly notice in arthritic patients are:

  • tight quadriceps and hamstrings on the affected side
  • reduced hip mobility
  • pelvic imbalance with rotated and fixated pelvic joints


These findings often explain why one joint continues taking more stress than it should.

 

Should you stop exercising?

In the early stage, yes—I often tell patients to stop exercising temporarily.

But that does not mean stop moving completely. It means stop repeatedly aggravating an inflamed joint.

Movements are encouraged in ‘painless range of motion’. Any movements that causes pain need to be avoided.

Phase 1: Calm it down

The first goal is to:

  • reduce irritation
  • calm inflammation
  • manage pain


This means temporarily reducing:

  • impact
  • excessive bending
  • repetitive loading
  • stress onto the bones and muscles


Phase 2: Rebuild it properly

Once the joint settles and the arthritis calms down, treatment will shift towards strengthening, stabilising and restoring proper range of motion.

Exercise is not the problem. Poor timing and poor load management are.

 

Key takeaway

For many typical osteoarthritis flare-ups, irritation should begin settling within a few weeks.

If symptoms continue dragging on, it often means the joint is still being repeatedly aggravated—usually by movement habits, poor load management, or compensation patterns that have not been addressed. It is your Chiropractor and TCM physician’s job to tell you what is going on in your condition and teach you to improve and stabilise your condition.

 
References

  • Felson DT. Osteoarthritis as a disease of mechanics. Osteoarthritis Cartilage. 2013.
  • Hunter DJ, Bierma-Zeinstra S. Osteoarthritis. Lancet. 2019.
  • Bennell KL, Hinman RS. Exercise as treatment for osteoarthritis. JAMA. 2015.
  • Sharma L. Biomechanical factors in osteoarthritis. Curr Opin Rheumatol. 2021.
  • Cross M et al. Global burden of osteoarthritis. Ann Rheum Dis. 2014.
  • Roos EM, Arden NK. Strategies for the prevention of knee osteoarthritis. Nat Rev Rheumatol. 2016.

Written by

DC Simon Shen

Chief Chiropractor

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