Osteoarthritis (OA) is common and manageable. Pain doesn’t always equal damage; strength and motion change the conversation your joints have with your brain. My approach: dose movement, share load across better mechanics, and pace activities so you can stay social and active.
What Helps Most
- Strength: Hips and quads for knees; glutes and core for spine; grip and forearm for hands.
- Motion: Gentle end-range visits daily—short, frequent beats heroic sessions.
- Activity pacing: Break tasks; alternate positions; warm up even for chores.
Starter Circuit (10 Minutes)
- Sit-to-Stand 2×8–10.
- Hip Hinge with dowel 2×8.
- Step-ups 2×8/side.
- Band Rows 2×10.
From Dr. Edward Komberg: “OA loves momentum—of the right kind. Nudge your joints daily, and they’ll let you do more than you think.”
Want an OA plan matched to your goals? See Dr. Edward Komberg—measurable strength and motion changes, week by week.
About the Author: Dr. Komberg builds realistic, empowering plans for active adults with OA across Los Angeles.