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Reviewed by medical AI · Updated: March 27, 2026
Understanding the key differences between the three most common types of arthritis — their symptoms, causes, and treatment.
vHospital · Health Education
Arthritis is not a single disease but an umbrella term covering more than 100 conditions affecting the joints. The three most common types — osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, and gout — have distinctly different causes, presentations, and treatments, making correct identification essential for appropriate management.
Osteoarthritis (OA) is the most common joint disease worldwide, characterized by cartilage breakdown, subchondral bone changes, and synovial inflammation. It affects primarily weight-bearing joints (knees, hips) and hands in older adults. Pain worsens with activity and improves with rest. Morning stiffness lasts less than 30 minutes. X-rays show joint space narrowing, osteophytes, and subchondral sclerosis.
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Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a systemic autoimmune disease causing persistent synovitis, erosive joint damage, and extra-articular manifestations (nodules, vasculitis, cardiopulmonary involvement). It characteristically affects the small joints of hands and feet symmetrically, with pronounced morning stiffness lasting > 60 minutes. Positive rheumatoid factor and anti-CCP antibodies are diagnostic. Early DMARD treatment (methotrexate, biologics) is critical to prevent irreversible joint damage.
Gout is caused by monosodium urate crystal deposition in joints due to hyperuricemia. Attacks begin suddenly, often at night, with excruciating pain, swelling, redness, and warmth — classically in the first metatarsophalangeal joint ('podagra'), ankle, or knee. Serum uric acid > 360 μmol/L (6 mg/dL) defines hyperuricemia. Acute attacks are treated with NSAIDs, colchicine, or corticosteroids. Long-term urate-lowering therapy with allopurinol prevents recurrence.
Arthritis Types: Osteoarthritis vs Rheumatoid vs Gout needs a clearer clinical angle than a generic educational article because many users arrive from symptoms or urgent question searches and want to understand where the topic fits in real decision-making. In practice, this subject is usually connected with symptom patterns such as Joint Pain, Swelling, Fatigue and conditions such as osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, gout, while common trigger contexts include the most frequent medical and lifestyle drivers. This article now surfaces those relationships more directly so that both crawlers and readers see it as part of a canonical medical topic cluster rather than as an isolated informational page with overlapping phrasing.
These patterns are for educational awareness only. A qualified healthcare professional should evaluate any combination of symptoms.
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⚠️ This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.