Overview
what it is and why it mattersYour ankle is a hinge joint where the bottom of your tibia and the smaller bone beside it (the fibula) form a slot that cradles the top bone of your foot (the talus). Surgeons call this the tibiotalar joint. A thin layer of cartilage lines both sides of that joint and lets the bones glide smoothly every time you take a step. When that cartilage wears away, you have osteoarthritis of the ankle.
Unlike hip or knee arthritis, which usually develops from decades of gradual wear, ankle osteoarthritis is almost always post-traumatic, the result of a prior fracture, repeated sprains that left the joint loose, or damage to the cartilage surface itself. Once that cartilage is damaged, the joint space narrows, the bone underneath thickens and hardens, and the body lays down bony ridges around the rim (called bone spurs) trying to stabilize what is becoming unstable.
A small number of ankles are affected by inflammatory or systemic arthritis instead, a different, body-wide condition that rheumatology diagnoses and manages; when a systemic cause is suspected, we refer you to a rheumatologist. The rest of this page covers the mechanical, post-traumatic ankle arthritis that orthopedics treats.
The ankle is a small, tightly fitting joint, it tolerates far less cartilage loss before the pain becomes limiting, but it can also be supported for longer with the right brace or shoe modification because its motion arc is narrower than the hip or knee.
What It Feels Like
the pattern of the painEarly on, you notice a deep ache at the front or sides of your ankle after a long walk or a day on your feet, the kind that fades with rest. Swelling around the joint, especially at the front where you can sometimes feel the bony ridges with your fingertips, comes and goes. Stiffness is worst first thing in the morning or after sitting, and the joint loosens within a few minutes of walking.
As the cartilage thins further, your ankle starts to lose the ability to pull your foot up toward your shin (dorsiflexion). You compensate without realizing it: your stride shortens, you roll through the outside of your foot, and uneven ground, gravel, grass, a curb, becomes a real obstacle rather than a minor adjustment. A catching or grinding sensation inside the joint is common once bone spurs are large enough to impinge during motion.
In later stages, the ankle may tilt inward or outward as one side wears faster than the other. Your shoe may wear unevenly, and the pain often shifts to the opposite side of the foot as other structures absorb the extra load. Night pain that wakes you up is a late signal, and when that starts, surgery is usually on the horizon.
How We Make the Diagnosis
exam and weight-bearing imagingStanding (weight-bearing) X-rays of your ankle, a front-to-back view, a side view, and a mortise view that shows the joint space between both ankle bones, are the first study your provider orders. Non-weight-bearing films miss a lot: cartilage loss looks less severe when the bones are not being pressed together by body weight. Your provider looks at the joint space (is it narrowed or gone?), the bone quality (is the bone underneath dense and white?), and any spurs that may be blocking motion.
If X-rays do not fully explain your symptoms, or if surgery is being planned, a CT scan maps the bone anatomy in detail, the size and location of spurs, the presence of cysts in the bone, and exactly how much joint surface is involved. MRI adds soft-tissue information, cartilage thickness, ligament integrity, and any cartilage damage hiding beneath the surface. Your provider also checks the alignment of your heel: if the heel is tilted inward or outward, that tilt concentrates force on one side of the ankle and must be addressed before or during any surgical procedure.
How We Treat It
what we try first, in orderThe goal of non-surgical care is to lower the force crossing the joint and quiet the flares so you stay comfortable doing what matters. The treatments below are listed in the order we usually introduce them, each one is added on top of the ones before, not instead of.
Activity Modification
The first goal is to reduce the peak forces crossing the joint without giving up fitness. That means shifting from running and jumping to cycling, swimming, or elliptical work, activities that keep your cardiovascular health up while taking the repetitive impact out of the equation. Even small changes in daily routine, like avoiding prolonged standing on concrete, can meaningfully lower the day-to-day pain burden.
Supportive Footwear / Orthosis
A stiff-soled shoe with a rocker bottom changes the way your foot rolls through each step. It reduces how much the ankle needs to bend and lets momentum carry your stride forward rather than forcing the arthritic joint through its painful arc. For more severe cases, a rigid ankle brace (an AFO, ankle-foot orthosis) immobilizes the joint enough to let you walk with significantly less pain while still fitting inside most shoes.
Physical Therapy
Therapy focuses on two things: keeping the muscles around your ankle, especially the calf and the muscles along the outer leg, strong enough to support the joint, and retraining the way you walk so that habits like shortening your stride or rolling through the outside of your foot do not create new pain in your knee, hip, or lower back.
Ankle Corticosteroid Injection
A corticosteroid injection directly into the ankle joint quiets the inflamed joint lining and can provide weeks to months of meaningful relief. It is especially useful during flare-ups, episodes where pain and swelling spike beyond your baseline, and as a bridge while therapy and bracing take effect. Repeated frequent injections are avoided because the steroid can soften the remaining cartilage over time.
Viscosupplementation (Hyaluronic Acid)
Hyaluronic acid, a lubricating gel injected into the joint, has limited evidence in the ankle compared with the knee. Some patients report months of improved comfort. It is sometimes considered after rest, activity changes, physical therapy, NSAIDs, and corticosteroid injection have been tried, and when surgery is not yet warranted. It is offered self-pay.
When Surgery Is Considered
after non-operative care is exhaustedSurgery is considered when bracing, injections, and therapy can no longer keep you comfortable enough to do the things that matter. The ankle is different from the hip or knee: total joint replacement is less predictable and less widely performed, so ankle fusion (arthrodesis), permanently joining the tibia to the talus, remains the gold standard for end-stage disease. A fused ankle eliminates the arthritic pain and provides a stable, durable limb for walking, though it does sacrifice the up-and-down motion of the joint. Your provider discusses fusion versus replacement, weighing your activity level, alignment, bone quality, and the condition of the joints above and below the ankle to recommend the best path.
For earlier disease, a camera-based cleanup of the joint can remove the bone spurs and loose fragments that catch during motion, before any decision about fusion or replacement is needed.
If non-operative care is not enough, these procedures can address this condition:
Providers Who Treat Ankle Osteoarthritis
Frequently Asked
questions we hear in clinicWhy did I get ankle arthritis when I never injured it badly?
Unlike hip or knee arthritis, which usually comes from decades of gradual wear, ankle osteoarthritis is usually post-traumatic. It follows a prior fracture, repeated sprains that left the joint loose, or damage to the cartilage surface itself. The injury can be years in the past, and the wear shows up long after the original problem seemed to heal.
Do I need an MRI or CT scan?
Not usually to start. Standing (weight-bearing) X-rays are the first study, because non-weight-bearing films make cartilage loss look less severe than it is. A CT scan is added when the X-rays do not fully explain your symptoms or when surgery is being planned, to map the bone, spurs, and cysts in detail. An MRI is used when soft-tissue information is needed, such as cartilage thickness, ligaments, or an osteochondral lesion.
How often can I get a cortisone injection?
A corticosteroid injection into the ankle can give weeks to months of relief and is especially useful during flare-ups or as a bridge while bracing and therapy take effect. Repeated frequent injections are avoided, because the steroid can soften the remaining cartilage over time.
Does a brace really help, or am I just delaying surgery?
Bracing genuinely lowers pain. A stiff-soled rocker-bottom shoe lets momentum carry your stride forward rather than forcing the arthritic joint through its painful arc, and for more severe cases a rigid ankle brace (an AFO) immobilizes the joint enough to walk with significantly less pain while still fitting inside most shoes. Because the ankle's motion arc is narrower than the hip or knee, it can often be supported this way for longer.
If I need surgery, will my ankle be replaced or fused?
It depends. The ankle is different from the hip or knee: total joint replacement is less predictable and less widely performed, so ankle fusion (arthrodesis), permanently joining the tibia to the talus, remains the gold standard for end-stage disease. A fusion removes the arthritic pain and gives a stable, durable limb for walking, though it sacrifices the up-and-down motion of the joint. Your provider weighs your activity level, alignment, bone quality, and the joints above and below the ankle when recommending fusion versus replacement.
Can I stay active without making it worse?
Yes, by shifting how you load the joint rather than stopping. Moving from running and jumping to cycling, swimming, or elliptical work keeps your cardiovascular fitness up while taking the repetitive impact out. Small daily changes, like avoiding prolonged standing on concrete, also meaningfully lower the day-to-day pain.
Further Reading
authoritative sourcesExternal patient-education references and related OSI pages for additional background:



