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Diabetes and metabolic health

Can diabetes cause joint pain that feels like arthritis?

Ask the doctor

By , Senior Faculty Editor, Harvard Health Publishing; Editorial Advisory Board Member, Harvard Health Publishing
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A senior woman experiencing pan rubs her shoulder.

Q. Does diabetes cause joint pain?

A. Diabetes is not a recognized cause of arthritis (joint inflammation). However, it can be associated with a number of conditions that cause joint pain. These include:

  • Neuropathy, including carpal tunnel syndrome. Symptoms include pain in the forearm, wrist, and hand, as well as burning, tingling, or numbness that may be due to the compression of the median nerve in the wrist (carpal tunnel syndrome) or diabetic nerve damage (neuropathy).
  • Tendinitis and trigger finger. Inflammation of a tendon (tendinitis) may cause pain near a joint. If the inflammation causes a nodule to form along the tendons in the palm, the nodule may catch in the tubelike sheath surrounding the finger tendons. The finger can then become temporarily stuck in a bent position. It can be "unstuck" by applying pressure with the other hand.
  • Frozen shoulder. Inflammation and scarring around the lining of the shoulder can cause significant shoulder pain and limited motion. When the limitation is in all directions, it's called adhesive capsulitis or frozen shoulder. The pain, which can feel very much like arthritis, may subside over time even if the limited motion does not.
  • Bursitis. Inflammation of the bursa, the saclike structures surrounding large joints, can cause pain in the area and is easily mistaken for arthritis.
  • Charcot joint. Also called neuroarthropathy, this condition is associated with diabetes when significant nerve damage has developed. Joints such as the ankle may become damaged and dislocated because the normal protective mechanisms of pain and the sense of position are impaired. As a result, abnormal stresses are applied to the joints and they are damaged. Despite impaired pain sensation, pain can be prominent early in the course of disease.

People with diabetes who have these conditions may feel they have arthritis because they have pain in their joints. However, while arthritis nearly always causes joint pain, not all joint pain is due to arthritis. None of these conditions are marked primarily by joint inflammation, and so they are not considered forms of arthritis.

The reason that people with diabetes are prone to tendinitis, bursitis, and frozen shoulder is not clear. Researchers are working on understanding the cause and, more importantly, how to prevent these problems from developing.

Image: © Jose Luis Pelaez Inc/Getty Images

About the Author

photo of Robert H. Shmerling, MD

Robert H. Shmerling, MD, Senior Faculty Editor, Harvard Health Publishing; Editorial Advisory Board Member, Harvard Health Publishing

Dr. Robert H. Shmerling is the former clinical chief of the division of rheumatology at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC), and is a current member of the corresponding faculty in medicine at Harvard Medical School. … See Full Bio
View all posts by Robert H. Shmerling, MD
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