Cortisone Injections
Corticosteroid, or cortisone, injections are used to reduce inflammation and provide short-term pain relief in selected orthopaedic conditions.
Common uses
- Inflamed arthritic joints.
- Subacromial bursitis or rotator cuff-related shoulder pain.
- Trigger finger and selected tendon sheath inflammation.
- Greater trochanteric pain syndrome or pes anserine bursitis.
- AC joint or glenohumeral joint arthritis.
Expected benefit
Cortisone injections are best understood as symptom-relieving treatments. The effect may be meaningful but is usually temporary. They can be particularly useful when inflammation is a major contributor to pain.
Risks and cautions
Possible risks include a temporary pain flare, skin depigmentation, fat atrophy, bruising, infection, temporary blood sugar elevation in diabetic patients, and tendon weakening if steroid is injected into tendon tissue. Repeated injections into the same joint should be used thoughtfully.
Before surgery
Timing matters if future joint replacement or tendon surgery is being considered. Please make sure the treating surgeon knows about any recent injection.
More injection information
For a broader explanation of injection choices, evidence limits, safety issues, and references, review the main Injection Therapy section.