This joint condition most often affects children who are active in sports. Learn about the symptoms and treatment.
Update Date: 20.05.2026
Osteochondritis dissecans (os-tee-o-kon-DRY-tis DIS-uh-kanz) is a condition in which a part of the bone of a joint begins to break loose due to lack of blood flow. A slippery tissue called cartilage that covers the joint also begins to break loose. The condition may cause pain that gets worse over time and a feeling of the joint's motion being blocked.
Osteochondritis dissecans happens most often in school-age children and teens. It may cause symptoms after a single injury to a joint. Or symptoms may appear after doing an activity that greatly loads the joint for several months. This is mainly true for high-impact sports and those that involve cutting and pivoting, such as soccer and basketball.
The condition most often affects the knees. But it also may affect elbows, ankles and other joints. Most often, the condition affects just one joint.
Some people might need surgery for ongoing pain or if the piece of bone and cartilage comes loose and moves around inside the joint.
Depending on the joint that's affected and how far along the condition is, symptoms of osteochondritis dissecans may include:
If you or your child has ongoing pain or soreness in the knee, elbow or another joint, see your healthcare professional. Also make an appointment if you or your child has joint swelling or can't move a joint through its full range of motion.
Experts don't know the cause of osteochondritis dissecans. Even a small injury repeated over time might lower blood flow to the end of the affected bone. People with certain genes may be more likely to get the condition.
Osteochondritis dissecans happens mainly in children and teens between the ages of 10 and 20 who are active in sports. Obesity may raise the risk.
Over time, osteochondritis dissecans can raise the risk of getting osteoarthritis at an early age in the affected joint. If not healed all the way, the condition can cause ongoing pain and trouble using the joint.
Learning about the risks to the joints linked with overuse might help teens who play sports. Learning how to move properly in their sports can help lower the chance of injury. So can training for the sports they play, strength training, and exercises that help improve body control and balance.
During a physical exam, a healthcare professional presses on the affected joint, checking for swelling or tenderness. Sometimes it's possible to feel a loose piece of bone and cartilage inside the joint. Your healthcare professional also has you or your child move the joint to check the joint's range of motion.
Health care professionals stage osteochondritis dissecans by the size of the injury, whether the piece of bone and cartilage is partly or totally loose, and whether the piece stays in place.
One or more of these tests can help diagnose osteochondritis dissecans:
The goal of osteochondritis dissecans treatment is to help the affected joint work well and relieve pain. Treatment also lowers the risk of osteoarthritis. No one treatment works for everyone. In children whose bones are still growing, the bone may heal with rest.
Nonsteroidal antiinflammatory medicines available without a prescription can give short-term pain relief. They include ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin IB, others) and naproxen sodium (Aleve).
At first, your healthcare professional may suggest the following:
Your healthcare professional might suggest surgery if your child:
Children who have stopped growing and adults with osteochondritis dissecans also often need surgery. The type of surgery depends on the size and stage of the injury.
You might first talk with your main healthcare professional, who might send you to a doctor who specializes in sports medicine or orthopedic surgery.
Make a list of:
For osteochondritis dissecans, some questions to ask include:
Be sure to ask all the questions you have.
Your healthcare professional may ask you questions, such as:
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