Living well with inflammatory arthritis.
Specialist physiotherapy for spondyloarthropathies, ankylosing spondylitis, psoriatic arthritis, and other inflammatory joint conditions. Focused on maintaining function, managing flares, and supporting an active life alongside your medical care.
Physiotherapy works alongside your rheumatologist's medical management — not as a replacement. Emil works in partnership with your treating doctors, with shared communication where helpful.
Inflammatory arthritis is different to other arthritis.
Most people use "arthritis" as a single word — but the underlying conditions are very different. Osteoarthritis is primarily a joint health and load condition. Inflammatory arthritis — including spondyloarthropathy, ankylosing spondylitis, psoriatic arthritis, and rheumatoid arthritis — is a systemic autoimmune condition where the body's immune system mistakenly targets joint tissues.
That distinction matters because it changes everything about treatment. Inflammatory arthritis requires medical management from a rheumatologist — typically including disease-modifying medications (DMARDs) or biologics — to control the underlying inflammation and prevent long-term joint damage.
Physiotherapy plays a complementary, important role: maintaining mobility and function, managing symptom flares, prescribing safe and appropriate exercise, and supporting your overall quality of life. Done well, physio significantly improves how people live with these conditions — but it's not a substitute for medical care.
How inflammatory arthritis behaves
Often 30+ minutes on waking — and improves with movement, not rest. This pattern is one of the strongest indicators of inflammatory rather than mechanical pain.
Symptoms come in waves rather than steadily progressing. Periods of high inflammation alternate with calmer phases — knowing how to manage each is essential.
Often affects several joints simultaneously and may include the spine, sacroiliac joints, fingers, and toes — not just the larger weight-bearing joints typical of OA.
Fatigue is often as disabling as joint pain itself. It's a systemic effect of inflammation — not laziness or poor sleep — and managing it deliberately is part of treatment.
Inflammatory arthritis is a family of conditions
Each has its own pattern, but the principles of physiotherapy management overlap. Below are the conditions Emil most commonly works with — each managed in partnership with your rheumatologist or specialist.
Spondyloarthropathy & ankylosing spondylitis
Spondyloarthropathies (axial spondyloarthritis, ankylosing spondylitis) primarily affect the spine and sacroiliac joints. Physiotherapy plays a central role — research consistently shows that regular structured exercise is one of the strongest predictors of long-term function for these conditions. Emil has a particular clinical interest here and stays current with evolving evidence.
- Inflammatory back pain
- Sacroiliac joint involvement
- Reduced spinal mobility
- Peripheral joint involvement
- Enthesitis (tendon insertions)
Psoriatic arthritis
Inflammatory joint involvement associated with psoriasis. Often affects fingers, toes, and entheses (where tendons attach to bone) — physio focuses on maintaining joint range and supporting hand and foot function.
Rheumatoid arthritis
Symmetrical joint inflammation, often starting in the small joints of the hands and feet. Physiotherapy supports joint protection strategies, range of motion, and exercise tolerance alongside medical management.
Reactive arthritis
Joint inflammation triggered by infection elsewhere in the body. Often resolves but can persist or recur. Physio supports recovery of joint function and gradual return to activity.
Enteropathic arthritis
Joint inflammation associated with inflammatory bowel disease (Crohn's, ulcerative colitis). Treatment is coordinated with gastroenterology — physio works on the musculoskeletal symptoms.
Juvenile-onset progressing
Inflammatory arthritis that began in childhood/adolescence and continues into adulthood. Long-term management focuses on function, mobility, and adapting exercise to your specific joints.
Undifferentiated
Inflammatory features without a clear specific diagnosis. Physiotherapy approaches focus on shared principles: maintaining function, managing flares, and building exercise tolerance.
Diagnosed by a rheumatologist? Bring any letters, imaging, or clinical notes to your first consult. Emil works in partnership with your treating doctor and can communicate directly with them where helpful.
Four ways physiotherapy supports your medical care
Medication controls inflammation. Physiotherapy helps you stay strong, mobile, and capable — managing day-to-day symptoms, preventing flare-related deconditioning, and supporting an active life.
Maintaining mobility & range
Inflammatory arthritis tends to reduce joint range and spinal flexibility over time. Targeted exercise prescribed and monitored by a physio is one of the most effective ways to preserve what you have.
- Spinal mobility programs (especially for spondyloarthropathy)
- Joint range exercises adapted to your condition
- Posture & alignment work where indicated
Managing flares safely
Symptom flares are a normal part of living with inflammatory arthritis. Knowing when to push, when to rest, and how to scale activity protects you from setbacks and preserves long-term function.
- Flare-specific exercise modifications
- Activity pacing strategies
- Knowing what's safe vs concerning
Strength & conditioning
Strength is protective. Inflammatory arthritis often comes with reduced muscle mass and deconditioning during flares — appropriate strength training rebuilds capacity and improves long-term outcomes.
- Progressive resistance training
- Cardiovascular conditioning
- Return to sport & activity programs
Education & self-management
Inflammatory conditions are long-term — most of your management happens between appointments. Emil's role is to give you the knowledge and tools to make confident daily decisions.
- Understanding your condition deeply
- Recognising flare patterns
- Knowing when to seek further input
Care that's coordinated, not siloed
Emil regularly liaises with rheumatologists, GPs, and other allied health practitioners — particularly for complex cases. Bring your medical correspondence and we'll build on what's already in place.
Your treatment journey, step by step
Treatment of inflammatory arthritis is long-term — but it doesn't mean weekly appointments forever. Here's what a typical journey with Emil looks like.
Comprehensive assessment
Detailed history including your diagnosis, current medications, prior physio, and life context. Physical assessment of joints, mobility, and functional capacity.
Personalised program
A tailored exercise and management plan — adjusted for your specific condition, joint involvement, current flare status, and goals.
Regular reviews
Sessions at the right interval — often every 4–6 weeks once stable. Progress is tracked using validated outcome measures and your own goals.
Long-term self-management
As you become confident, sessions space out. Emil remains available for flare check-ins, plan updates, or returns to activity.
FAQ on inflammatory arthritis physio
Things people often ask before booking — answered carefully.
Q. Will physio replace my rheumatology medications?
Q. Should I exercise during a flare?
Q. Do I need a referral from my rheumatologist?
Q. How often should I see a physio?
Q. What if I haven't been formally diagnosed yet?
Q. Can hands-on treatment help, or is it all exercise?
Q. Will Emil communicate with my specialist?
Q. Mobile, in-clinic, or telehealth — which is best?
Take control of your day-to-day function
Send Emil a message describing your diagnosis and current situation. He'll work with you — and with your specialist — to build a long-term, sustainable approach.