Chart — Musculoskeletal
Osteoarthritis vs Rheumatoid Arthritis Comparison
OA and RA share a word and almost nothing else — one is mechanical wear in a joint, the other is a systemic autoimmune disease that happens to live in joints. The distinctions below are among the most reliably tested comparisons in nursing school.
Educational use only. Diagnosis and treatment of arthritis are provider-directed; DMARD and biologic monitoring follows rheumatology protocols. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Feature | Osteoarthritis (OA) | Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) |
|---|---|---|
| Pathophysiology | Degenerative — cartilage wears down with age and load; local disease | Autoimmune — synovium attacked and inflamed; systemic disease |
| Typical onset | Gradual, after 40–50; tracks with age, obesity, prior joint injury | Any age, peak 30–60; women affected far more often |
| Joint pattern | Asymmetric — weight-bearing joints (knees, hips, spine), DIP and PIP fingers, thumb base | Symmetric (both sides) — small joints first: MCP and PIP fingers, wrists; spares DIP |
| Morning stiffness | Brief — usually under 30 minutes; worsens with use through the day | Prolonged — an hour or more; improves with gentle movement |
| Systemic signs | None — pain is local | Fatigue, low-grade fever, weight loss, malaise; can involve lungs, heart, eyes |
| Hand findings | Heberden (DIP) and Bouchard (PIP) bony nodes | Boggy, warm synovitis; later ulnar deviation, swan-neck and boutonnière deformities; rheumatoid nodules at pressure points |
| Labs | Normal — diagnosis is clinical plus X-ray (joint-space narrowing, osteophytes) | Positive RF and anti-CCP (most specific), elevated ESR/CRP, possible anemia of chronic disease |
| Core treatment | Weight management, exercise, heat/cold, acetaminophen and NSAIDs, joint replacement when end-stage | Early DMARDs (methotrexate first-line) and biologics to halt damage; NSAIDs/steroids bridge symptoms |
| Nursing emphasis | Joint protection, activity pacing, weight loss support, pre/post arthroplasty care | Medication adherence and infection vigilance (immunosuppression), flare management, energy conservation, ROM preservation |
Where Gout Fits
The third arthritis exams test is gout — crystal-induced, abrupt, and usually monoarticular (classically the great toe at night), with a red-hot joint that neither OA nor RA produces that suddenly. When a question gives one explosive joint instead of a pattern of joints, switch frameworks from this chart to gout.
NCLEX Pearls
- ✦Morning stiffness under 30 minutes that worsens with activity = OA; an hour-plus that improves with movement = RA.
- ✦Symmetric small-joint swelling with fatigue and low-grade fever points to RA — it is a whole-body disease.
- ✦Heberden and Bouchard nodes are OA; ulnar deviation and swan-neck deformities are RA.
- ✦RA patients on methotrexate or biologics are immunosuppressed — fever and infection signs get reported early, and live vaccines are avoided per provider guidance.
- ✦For OA, land on weight management and exercise as the foundation — not rest. Unloading the joint while keeping it moving is the goal in both diseases.
Related Resources
Standards & sources
Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026This page is written to align with American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS) · National Association of Orthopaedic Nurses (NAON). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →
