Young friends playing basketball - learn about dealing with body pain as you age

Learn about your body and how it changes as you age

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Find out how your body works, changes you may experience as you get older, and how to deal with age-related body pain.

Anatomy of the body

In your body, bones, muscles, tendons, ligaments, nerves and other tissues combine to create the ’musculoskeletal system’, which allows the body to move and maintain its form and shape.

  • Our bones form the skeleton, the framework that provides support and protects the soft tissues that make up the rest of the body.
  • The muscles, controlled by the nervous system, provide us with strength, balance, posture, movement and heat.
  • ...
  • Muscles and bones attach at the joints, where bones meet, to allow our body to move. Joints can be found in our knees, shoulders, hips, wrists and fingers.
  • Ligaments are bands of fibrous connective tissue that connect bones together to support and strengthen joints.
  • Tendons are also bands of fibrous tissue, but which connect muscles to bones, allowing them to move.
  • Cartilage is the rubbery substance that coats the ends of bones in joints to help cushion them and allow them to move smoothly.
  • Nerves carry information about sensations and movement throughout the body.

 

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DID YOU KNOW?

Over half of the bones in your body are found in your hands and feet. There are 27 in each hand and 26 in each foot.

Ageing and our bodies

As you get older, your body changes - when our body’s cells, tissues and organs change over time, it affects how the body functions. Cells become larger with age and are less able to divide and multiply, losing their ability to function, or even begin to function abnormally. Ageing also causes tissues to lose mass (known as atrophy) or to become more rigid and difficult to move. Over time, bones lose density and become more brittle, while thinning of bones in the spine (vertebrae) can cause them to become curved and compressed.

You are also more likely to develop conditions such as osteoarthritis (the most common type of arthritis) as you age, where joints become stiffer and less flexible, and the cartilage begins to wear away. This condition commonly affects knee joints and joints in the hand. Breakdown of the joints may lead to inflammation, stiffness, deformity and pain, making it uncomfortable to move around or carry out your daily routine.

*GSK Global Pain Index Research 2014 Report. Available: www.global-pain-index.com. Last accessed 20th April 2016.

Percentage icon stating 53% of 55+ experience joint pain
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Taking care of our ageing bodies

One of the best ways to slow or prevent problems with muscles, joints and bones is moderate exercise, which can help you to maintain strength, balance and flexibility....

If you do begin to experience more pain in your body, whether it’s your back or shoulders aching more at the end of a long day, or if you start to suffer from mild osteoarthritis, there is no need to simply accept pain as a fact of getting older. Your pharmacist can advise you on what medicines are available to treat your pain and reduce the inflammation that is often a cause of the pain itself. They can also offer advice on diet and exercises that can help to ease pain.

If you suffer from persistent pain in your joints, muscles or bones as you get older, you should visit your doctor who can carry out an examination or tests to identify the cause of your pain and offer advice on how to ease the pain as well as prescribing stronger medicines if necessary. Always tell your doctor about any medicines you are already taking, including ones bought from a pharmacy.

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Treatment by pain type

Learn all about the causes, symptoms, and pain treatments for the type of pain you’re experiencing so you can get back to doing those little things that bring you joy.