Bursitis is a painful ailment affecting your joints. Fluid-filled sacs known as bursae act as a cushion between your tendons, bones, muscles and joints. Inflammation of these sacs is called bursitis. It’s a fairly common condition, but many individuals treat inflammation of the bursa at home and don’t see their doctor, so it’s difficult to know exactly how common it really is.
While bursitis can occur in any area of your body where you have bursae, there are a few specific types of bursitis, which we cover in this article. You’ll also learn the causes and symptoms of each type, treatment options and how to prevent bursitis, which may include gentle stretching before exercising.
Hip bursitis, also called trochanteric bursitis, causes pain on the outside of the hip joint. Frequently, individuals worry the symptoms they experience are those of hip arthritis, but hip bursitis-related pain is felt consistently on the outside of your hip, while hip arthritis is usually felt in your thigh, groin or buttocks.
Hip bursitis usually hurts when you place direct pressure on your hip and is frequently an issue when you sleep at night on your side. It will usually improve with simple treatment like ice, rest, physical therapy and injections.
There are many known hip bursitis causes, ranging from mild to severe. Some include:
Some pre-existing conditions can cause also the development of hip bursitis, including:
Pain at the point of your hip is the primary symptom of trochanteric bursitis. This pain typically extends to the outside of your thigh area. It can be intense and sharp in the early stages and then spread across a bigger area of your hip and ache in later stages. You might also experience warmth and swelling around the affected area. Your bursa could become thick over time, making the swelling worse and causing weakened muscles and limited movement in the area.
You can prevent bursitis by not placing a lot of strain on your hips. Refrain from partaking in particularly painful or difficult activities, and take frequent breaks for resting your hips. Remember to warm your muscles up when you exercise and stretch to prevent injury. Lose weight if you’re overweight, which can help decrease joint pressure, including your hips.
Knee bursitis is where you have inflammation of your bursa located close to your knee joint. Bursae decrease pressure and friction points between your bones and muscles, tendons and skin close to your joints. Any of your knee bursa can become inflamed, but knee bursitis often occurs on the inner side of the knee below your joint or over your kneecap.
Bursitis impacting the knee is in some cases is called “housemaid’s knee” or “clergyman’s knee.”
A few risk factors make some individuals more likely to develop bursitis of the knee. These include:
Some individuals with knee bursitis develop septic bursitis where their prepatellar bursa becomes infected. Septic bursitis occurs more frequently during the summer months. You can develop an infection that reaches your bursa through a puncture, cut or insect bite. Sometimes you can develop septic bursitis without a noticeable scrape or cut and the root cause is unknown.
Certain medications and health conditions which suppress your immune system could make you more susceptible to septic bursitis. For instance, you could have a higher risk of developing septic bursitis if you have:
Symptoms and signs of knee bursitis vary and depend on the affected bursa and what the cause of the inflammation is. Generally, the affected part of your knee may feel tender, swollen and warm when you apply pressure on it. You may experience pain when you move or when resting.
Prevention of knee bursitis consists of:
Shoulder bursitis is where your shoulder joint has painful inflammation. It’s common and treatable and typically it heals within months. Gentle exercises and rest could speed up recovery. When your shoulder bursa becomes irritated, it becomes inflamed, growing in size. This causes you to have less shoulder space for tendons and muscles to move around, which could cause pain and a loss of movement and pain in your shoulder.
Shoulder bursitis can have more than one cause. Of the possible causes listed here, overuse and injuries are the most common. Causes include:
Like with knee bursitis, frequent “mini-traumas,” which could cause the same issues as one more severe trauma, could cause shoulder bursitis. If you repeatedly lift your arms overhead in sports or at work, you’re more susceptible to developing shoulder bursitis with time. You have a higher risk of shoulder bursitis if you’re a:
Primary symptoms of shoulder bursitis are:
You may experience worsened pain at night, particularly when you lie on the affected shoulder. It could also become worse after you keep your shoulder still for a while. If you’re also experiencing a fever with these symptoms, you could have septic bursitis and need to see your doctor right away.
The key to preventing shoulder bursitis is to reduce strain on your shoulder joint. You could prevent shoulder bursitis with the following strategies:
You get elbow bursitis in your olecranon bursa, a fluid-filled sac located at the bony tip of your elbow. Usually, your olecranon bursa is flat, but if it becomes inflamed or irritated, you could have more fluid accumulate in your bursa, causing bursitis.
There are a few reasons for elbow bursitis. These are:
Symptoms may include:
Not all types of bursitis are preventable, but you could reduce the severity of it. You could also decrease your risk of flare-ups in the future.
Reduce the stress you place on the joint and avoid lifting heavy things. Muscle building and exercising could help prevent injury in the future.
Achilles bursitis, also called retrocalcaneal bursitis, is common in athletes. Your retrocalcaneal bursa lies between your calcaneus (heel bone) and your Achilles tendon. When you have repetitive trauma, it can cause bursa inflammation, which often gets confused with Achilles tendonitis.
There are several causes of Achilles tendon bursitis:
Heel pain is the main symptom of Achilles tendon bursitis. You may only experience the pain when you apply pressure on your heel.
Other symptoms might include:
You could prevent this problem by:
Iliopsoas bursitis is inflammation of the bursa under the iliopsoas muscles, which connect the femur to the spine and are the strongest hip flexors. This is different from hip bursitis, which is inflammation of the bursa on the outside of the femur. Iliopsoas bursitis could cause limited range of motion and pain in your hip joint. It often develops from overuse in those who regularly exercise or athletes.
A few things can cause iliopsoas bursitis:
Depending on how severe the swelling is, you could experience pain in the front of your hip and radiating down your leg. It could also radiate towards your buttocks.
Also, you could experience stiffness in the morning. This stiffness often subsides throughout the day, but you could experience pain when you:
It’s not uncommon for the discomfort and pain to become more severe over time.
Exercise and stretching could help prevent this condition. One of the main causes is rubbing and friction potentially occurring when your hips are too tight. You can alleviate the tightness with stretching.
Certain spine disorders like arthritis, scoliosis and leg length discrepancy could all increase your risk of bursitis.
Scapulothoracic bursitis impacts your upper back between your ribs and shoulder blades and could cause a popping sensation or pain. You can worsen the pain by doing push ups or reaching your arms overhead.
Back bursitis could result from issues in your soft tissues — inflammation from repeated movements — or bones of your chest wall and scapula. In some cases, your muscles under your scapula shrink from inactivity or weakness, and this leaves your scapula bone closer to your rib cage. This leads to friction from your bones rubbing and bumping together when you move, which causes back bursitis to develop.
Other possible causes are:
Some symptoms you may experience with back bursitis are:
Perform range-of-motion exercises each day for preventing stiffness.
Bursitis treatment options include:
Your doctor may also recommend physical therapy. A physical therapist could provide you with:
Surgery is rarely required for treating bursitis. It’s used only when the conservative treatments fail. If you do require surgery, it’s a fairly simple procedure. Your doctor will remove the inflamed bursa. Many joints can still function regularly without the bursa. Typically, the surgery doesn’t require you to stay for a long visit in the hospital and your recovery period should be short.
Don’t continue to endure the pain of bursitis at home. Call us today at (301) 530-1010 to schedule an appointment with an orthopedic surgeon at OrthoBethesda. You can also request an appointment online. We’ll help you treat you bursitis, and show you how to prevent it from reoccurring.
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