Hypermobility (double-jointed): How normal is it and what pain can it cause?

Written in association with: Dr Anthony Hammond
Published: | Updated: 11/12/2020
Edited by: Emma McLeod

For most people, joint hypermobility is a normal phenomenon. For some, it can lead to debilitating conditions. Dr Anthony Hammond, a consultant rheumatologist and specialist in interventional pain management, explains what hypermobility is, when it goes beyond a normal physical occurrence and if the consequences of hypermobility can be treated.

A woman with hypermobility stretching. Her upper body is parallel to her legs and her arms are flat on the floor, behind her feet.

What is hypermobility? Is it similar to flexibility or being double-jointed?

The first thing to say is that, for most people, joint hypermobility is normal. This is also called being “double-jointed”, which is simply the layman’s term to describe the tricks or contortions of joints that the more hypermobile people can readily do. Flexibility is a general characteristic and has a range from stiff to very bendy. The people with the bendiest joints are said to be hypermobile and most children and many young women, particularly of Southern or Eastern Asian origin, are in the most mobile or hypermobile range.

 

This isn’t necessarily bad and may provide an athletic advantage - I would guess all gymnasts are hypermobile and anybody who can do “that” pose in the yoga class will be too. Furthermore, being flexible probably contributes positively to healthy ageing. If you answer these questions positively, you are probably hypermobile:

 

Can you now (or could you ever):

  • Place your hands flat on the floor without bending your knees?
  • Bend your thumb to touch your forearm?
  • Consider yourself double-jointed?
  • Do tricks to contort your body or do the splits?
  • Dislocate your shoulder or kneecaps more than once?

 

What are the symptoms of hypermobility?

Joint hypermobility can cause musculoskeletal problems which are, effectively, an over-expression of the kind of things that happen to us all, such as:

 

Anyone, regardless of their level of flexibility, can have these issues but the excessively hypermobile patients will accumulate repeated problems and may eventually have multiple persisting issues. Episodes of exercise-related injury merge into chronic painful problems and simple joint hypermobility begins to become joint hypermobility syndrome (JHS), which is hypermobility plus associated problems.

 

These are frequently readily understandable in terms of weakness and vulnerability of tendons and joints, but there are all also an extended range of symptoms which are less directly explained but clearly associated:

 

Most debilitatingly, there is a tendency to develop chronic fatigue and central pain amplification (fibromyalgia syndrome).

 

When these occur together and develop, fully normal hypermobility can turn into a very debilitating and painful syndrome of associated features. A good proportion of these patients, especially younger women with chronic fatigue, enter this condition through a hypermobility associated path, though this is frequently not recognised.

 

What are the causes/risk factors of hypermobility?

The “causes” are constitutional and genetic. Joint hypermobility syndrome (JHS) can be thought of as part of a range of hereditary disorders of connective tissue along with conditions such as Ehlers-Danlos syndromes (EDS) and Marfan syndrome. The genetic problems in these syndromes are well understood to be caused by deletions in genes. These lead to defective protein synthesis within the extracellular matrix of collagen, elastin, proteoglycans and glycoproteins - the structural tissues of the skeleton and body that hold us together and give us shape and substance.

 

However, there are no identifiable genetic abnormalities in JHS and there is a form of EDS where genes can be identified, but the syndrome is exactly the same as the non-genetic JHS form.

 

In practical terms, EDS and Marfan syndrome have hypermobility only as part of a more complex condition, and often with readily recognisable bodily features, while many  hypermobile patients may show some features of the genetic conditions such as skin stretchability, unusual stretch marks, papery scars, easy bruising, varicose veins  etc. and may have the hypermobile (only) form of EDS. The distinction is not of practical importance since medical management does not change if one could identify given genes, and tests are not routinely carried out.

 

Does it affect some parts of the body more than others?

The joints and tendons are the most frequently affected. Individual joints often have recognisable patterns of problems such as:

 

There can be functional issues of internal organs with abnormalities of heart rate and bowel (called autonomic dysfunction), lung leak and lung collapse (pneumothorax). In the rare extreme forms of EDS, there can be significant alterations in larger arteries and heart valves which can be dangerous and less so in Marfan syndrome.

 

Can it be cured? How is it treated?

As flexibility is a constitutional feature (i.e. it’s how you are made), it cannot be “cured” in any sense. However, individual problems can be managed to the patient’s benefit and it can be very helpful to have a clear statement of why all these curious and unrelated things are happening in one person – this is the dignity of a diagnosis.

  • Muscle and tendon problems are managed by physiotherapists who will also look after training and deconditioning.
  • POTS and autonomic issues are managed by physicians, often cardiologists, and may involve complex medical therapies.
  • As an arthritis and spinal pain expert, I am often involved in the management of the general pain state, fibromyalgia and specific spinal issues which are common. These require special consideration and different interventions in the JHS patient.
  • Chronic tendon injuries can be encouraged to mend with regenerative injections.
  • Psychological support in the form of cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) and counselling can be of great help.

 

Importantly, self-help is possible and I would point all patients to the HMSA (Hypermobility Syndromes Association) website.

 

Receive highly professional and personalised care from Dr Anthony Hammond by booking your first consultation (online or in clinic) via his profile.

By Dr Anthony Hammond
Rheumatology

Dr Anthony Hammond is a highly respected consultant rheumatologist and leading specialist in minimally invasive pain management based in London. He is renowned for his expertise in rheumatoid arthritis, inflammatory arthritis and in the interventional management of spinal pain problems, including slipped disc and trapped nerve, amongst others. More recently, Dr Hammond has continued to develop his range of treatment options gaining expertise and collaborating with leading experts in Regenerative Medicine including stem cells (BMAC and Lipogems) and activated plasma (PRP and Goldic) treatments for advanced osteoarthritis of joints, degenerative disc disease, spinal stenosis and other common and hard to treat problems.

Dr Hammond qualified in medicine from Edinburgh Medical School in 1980 before pursuing further training in general medicine and rheumatology in Bristol, Bath and London. During this period, he trained at a number of esteemed institutions including The Royal National Hospital for Rheumatic Diseases (the Mineral Water Hospital), Bath, The Royal Postgraduate Medical School, Hammersmith Hospital and St Bart’s Hospital, London. In 1992, he was awarded a medical doctorate, with his thesis specialising in the immunopathology of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Dr Hammond served for many years as a general physician and rheumatologist at Maidstone Hospital, later establishing the rheumatology department while combining his practice with clinical research.

He developed his interest in spinal pain management through the teaching and training of the International Pain and Spinal Intervention Society (IPSIS) and is now a senior tutor for this prestigious organisation. He was a founding partner of The KIMS hospital, Kent and now works in private practice in a number of prestigious organisations including: The London Clinic, HSSH Harley Street Specialist Hospital, Living Room Health, The Castle Quay Medical Practice, London Medical, the highly respected musculoskeletal centre The Fortius Clinic London, and is also part of The Regenerative Clinic group for collaborative development of stem cell therapy for spinal pain. After spending a year on Jersey as part of a States led review of service he is establishing a private practice in St Helier. He is a registered Medical Cannabis prescriber for complex chronic pain and fibromyalgia syndrome.

With an extensive portfolio of academic publications, Dr Hammond is widely regarded as a leading practitioner due his rare expertise in both medical rheumatology and advanced interventional pain management. He continues to be an active researcher and collaborator in a number of ongoing clinical trials. He also holds various teaching responsibilities and is a European instructor and member of the International Spinal Intervention Society. With his wealth of clinical experience, Dr Hammond also serves as a highly esteemed medicolegal expert.

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