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HCA UK Outpatients & Diagnostics The Shard, 32 St Thomas Street, London SE1 9BS
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Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a chronic autoimmune condition that primarily affects the joints, leading to inflammation, pain, stiffness, and, over time, structural damage. The small joints of the hands and wrists are commonly affected, and the impact can be significant, limiting daily activities such as cooking, writing, dressing, and personal care.
At London Bridge Orthopaedics, we provide specialist assessment and personalised treatment, including both medical and surgical options. Our goal is to relieve pain, preserve hand function, and improve quality of life.
RA occurs when the body’s immune system mistakenly attacks the synovium, the lining of the joints, leading to inflammation.
In the hands, this inflammation can:
If left untreated, the disease can cause progressive joint destruction, permanent deformity, and functional limitation.
RA can affect adults of any age but typically develops between 30 and 60 years. Women are three times more likely to be affected than men. Factors that increase the likelihood of hand involvement include:
Hands are often the first area affected, and symptoms are usually symmetrical, involving the same joints on both hands.
Symptoms may develop gradually over weeks or months and often include:
Many patients report difficulty performing routine tasks, leading to frustration and reduced independence.
Diagnosis is made through a combination of:
Accurate assessment is critical to tailor treatment plans and determine whether surgical intervention may be appropriate.
Symptom severity may increase with:
Understanding aggravating factors helps guide activity modification, splinting, and timing of surgical intervention.
Most patients initially manage RA with non-surgical strategies:
Conservative management aims to reduce inflammation, slow disease progression, and maintain hand function.
In early RA, these measures are often sufficient to prevent severe deformity. However, surgery may be required when pain persists, deformities progress, or tendons are damaged.
Surgery is considered when pain, functional limitation, or deformity persists despite optimal medical management.
Unlike medical therapy, surgery addresses structural damage, restores alignment, and improves hand function.
Surgery is usually elective, performed under regional or general anaesthetic, and often as a day-case or short-stay procedure depending on complexity. Post-operative care typically involves:
Recovery times vary: synovectomy and tendon procedures may allow gradual use within 2 – 4 weeks, while joint replacements or multiple procedures may require longer rehabilitation.
Evidence from NICE guidance shows that surgical intervention in RA:
Surgery does not cure RA or prevent future flare-ups, but it allows patients to maintain independence and quality of life even with ongoing disease activity.
A hand specialist should be consulted if:
Early referral allows careful planning of surgical or non-surgical interventions to maximise hand function and quality of life.
No. Surgery does not cure RA, but it addresses structural damage, reduces pain, and improves function.
Surgery is recommended when pain, deformity, or functional limitation persists despite optimal medical management.
Complications are uncommon but can include infection, stiffness, nerve injury, or delayed healing. These are minimised under specialist care.
Recovery depends on the procedure; simple tendon repairs may take a few weeks, while joint replacements or multiple procedures may require several months.
Yes. Corrective procedures can restore alignment, reduce visible deformity, and improve overall function.
With appropriate hand therapy and ongoing RA management, most patients achieve significant improvements in grip, dexterity, and daily function.
We are a group of established consultants who care about our patients. We cover all the subspecialty areas of orthopaedics:
Meet the team at London Bridge Orthopaedics.
Consultants at London Bridge Orthopaedics provide service for patients with our without private medical insurance.

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