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April 23, 2026

Joint Pain In Pregnancy: Ligament Laxity and Mechanical Load

Most joint pain in pregnancy is mechanical: relaxin-driven ligament laxity, weight gain, and shifted posture. Persistent swollen-joint pain is the exception that needs review. Here is the picture.

Joint Pain In Pregnancy: Ligament Laxity and Mechanical Load

Why It Happens In Pregnancy

Pregnancy joint pain is usually a normal mechanical consequence of the body adapting to carry and deliver a baby.

  • Relaxin and ligament laxity. Hormones loosen ligaments to prepare the pelvis. This reduces joint stability and causes pelvic, hip, and lower-back pain, including pelvic girdle pain.

  • Weight gain and shifted load. Added weight and a forward-shifted centre of gravity increase load on knees, hips, and spine.

  • Postural change. The growing abdomen alters posture and gait, concentrating strain on weight-bearing joints.

  • Fluid retention. Cyclical and progressive fluid shifts can cause hand and wrist stiffness, sometimes with carpal tunnel symptoms.

  • Pre-existing arthritis. Inflammatory arthritis behaviour can change in pregnancy, sometimes improving, sometimes flaring, and is managed with the maternity and rheumatology teams.

When Joint Pain Is a Red Flag (Any Context)

  • A hot, red, acutely swollen single joint with fever. Possible septic joint. Emergency.
  • One leg with calf swelling, pain, warmth, or redness. Possible deep vein thrombosis. Urgent in pregnancy.
  • Joint pain with persistent swelling, prolonged morning stiffness, or rash. Possible inflammatory arthritis. Review with the maternity team.
  • Severe pelvic pain limiting walking. Pelvic girdle pain warrants physiotherapy referral.

What Makes Pregnancy-Linked Joint Pain Different

The reassuring pattern is mechanical: load-related pelvic, hip, back, and knee pain that tracks the pregnancy and eases postpartum. Persistent swollen-joint pain with prolonged morning stiffness is the exception that warrants review. All assessment and treatment in pregnancy is directed by the maternity team.

How to Manage

  • Use supported movement and physiotherapy. Pelvic support, targeted exercises, and posture advice are first-line for mechanical pain.

  • Manage load. Pacing, supportive footwear, and gradual activity reduce weight-bearing joint strain.

  • Report swollen-joint or leg symptoms. Persistent joint swelling, or one-sided calf swelling and pain, needs prompt review with the maternity team.

  • Coordinate pre-existing arthritis care. Medication and monitoring in pregnancy are managed jointly by the maternity and rheumatology teams.

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