Published on: 18-Jun-2026
Men have a well-documented relationship with pain: they minimize it, rationalize it, and more often than not, play through it. Research consistently shows that men in the United States die on average five years earlier than women, are more likely to make unhealthy or risky choices, and are significantly more likely to delay or avoid medical care altogether. In orthopedic medicine, that delay has a direct clinical cost, and it shows up every day in the exam room.
The “I’ll Walk It Off” Mentality and What It Actually Does to Your Joints
The instinct to push through pain is deeply ingrained in active men, from weekend warriors to former collegiate athletes to professionals managing decades of accumulated wear. A knee that aches after a run, a shoulder that catches during a lift, a clicking sound that has been there for months, these are not normal features of an aging active body. They are signals. And the longer those signals are ignored, the more structural damage accumulates beneath the surface, quietly narrowing the window for less invasive treatment.
Cartilage does not regenerate on its own. A meniscus tear that could have been repaired arthroscopically becomes a meniscectomy, and eventually an accelerated path to osteoarthritis, when left unaddressed for years. A partial rotator cuff tear that was manageable with PRP injection therapy and physical therapy can progress to a full-thickness tear requiring significantly more complex reconstruction.
Knee Pain Is Not a Normal Part of Getting Older
One of the most persistent myths in men’s health is that joint pain is simply the price of an active life, something to be accepted rather than addressed. Persistent knee pain, swelling after activity, mechanical catching or locking, and instability during cutting movements are all clinical indicators of underlying pathology that warrants evaluation. Ligament injuries, meniscus damage, and early cartilage deterioration are all highly treatable conditions, but only when caught before they compound.
The Spare the Scalpel® philosophy practiced at Midwest Orthopaedics at Rush is built around exactly this principle: the earlier a patient seeks evaluation, the more non-operative options remain available. Targeted injection therapy, bracing, and structured rehabilitation can resolve many conditions that, left for another year, would require surgery.
Shoulder Symptoms Men Dismiss — and Shouldn’t
Shoulder pain in active men most commonly originates from rotator cuff pathology, labral tears, or AC joint deterioration, conditions that develop gradually and are easy to minimize until function is significantly compromised. The tell-tale signs that warrant immediate evaluation include pain that disrupts sleep, weakness when reaching overhead or behind the back, and a painful arc of motion during lifting or throwing.
What is particularly costly about delayed shoulder care is that the rotator cuff’s capacity for repair diminishes significantly as a tear progresses. A repairable partial tear becomes an irreparable full-thickness tear. A condition that responds well to OrthoBiologics becomes a reconstruction requiring months of rehabilitation. The full shoulder procedure library at Midwest Orthopaedics at Rush covers the complete spectrum, from arthroscopic labral repair to rotator cuff reconstruction, but the outcomes at the less invasive end of that spectrum are reserved for patients who come in early.
Elbow Pain in Active Men: The Symptom That Gets Rationalized Away
Medial and lateral elbow pain, commonly presenting as golfer’s elbow or tennis elbow, is among the most frequently self-managed conditions in active men, with many attributing it to overuse and assuming it will resolve with rest. When it doesn’t, the underlying tendinopathy or ligamentous pathology has often progressed to a point where conservative care requires significantly longer recovery timelines. The elbow procedure library at Midwest Orthopaedics at Rush addresses the full range of elbow conditions, from UCL reconstruction to arthroscopic elbow surgery.
Men’s Health Month Reminder: Joint Pain Should Never Be Ignored
June is Men’s Health Month, a nationally recognized moment to encourage men to take their health seriously. But the best reason to seek evaluation is not the calendar. It is the knee that has been limiting your runs for eight months, the shoulder that woke you up again last night, or the elbow that has quietly changed how you play. OrthoBiologics including PRP and BMAC, minimally invasive arthroscopic surgery, and advanced cartilage restoration techniques have transformed what is possible in joint preservation, but only for patients who give their care team the opportunity to intervene before the damage becomes irreversible.
The post Men’s Joint Health: Why Active Men Wait Too Long to Seek Treatment — and What It Costs Them appeared first on Sports Medicine Weekly By Dr. Brian Cole.