Dismiss Modal

Treatment

Arthroscopy

Choose a preferred language

When you take a step or raise your hand, your joints help you move freely. But living with a worn or injured joint can make an active lifestyle painful. Your doctor uses arthroscopy to see, diagnose, and often treat your joint problem. Other diagnostic tests are usually done before arthroscopy. They include a complete health history and exam. You also might get an X-ray, CT scan, or MRI. After arthroscopy, you may be able to return to many of the activities you once enjoyed.


Why arthroscopy?

  • The surgeon can often find and treat the problem during 1 procedure.

  • The surgeon can often see the joint better than with open surgery.

  • Arthroscopy uses smaller incisions than open surgery. So you may recover faster. You may have less scarring.


How arthroscopy works

Your surgeon will use an arthroscope to look inside your joint. This is a thin instrument about the size of a pencil that contains a lens and a light source. Your doctor puts the arthroscope and other special tools into the joint through tiny cuts (incisions). The arthroscope uses a camera to send an image of your joint to a monitor. This lets your surgeon see your joint more clearly. You will still get anesthesia. It may be general, spinal, or local. This means that you will not feel the arthroscopy at all. 

Two health care providers performing knee arthroscopy on patient in operating room.


Risks of arthroscopy

As with any surgery, arthroscopy involves some risks. These are rare but include:

  • Excess bleeding.

  • Blood clots.

  • Infection.

  • Damage to nerves and blood vessels.

  • A shift to open surgery that would need a larger incision.

  • Reaction to the anesthesia.

© 2000-2025 The StayWell Company, LLC. All rights reserved. This information is not intended as a substitute for professional medical care. Always follow your healthcare professional's instructions.

Make an Appointment

Make an Appointment

Find a Doctor

Find a Doctor

Find a Location

Find a Location

Related Services

Orthopedics Center

Related Articles
Read article
Orthopedics
Having Arm Fracture Open Reduction and Internal Fixation (ORIF)

Open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF) is a type of treatment to fix a broken bone. It puts the pieces of a broken bone back together so they can heal.

Read article
Orthopedics
Kyphoplasty

Kyphoplasty is a procedure that can help relieve the pain of vertebral compression fracture (a collapse of bone in your spine most commonly caused by osteoporosis).

Read article
Orthopedics
Foot Surgery: Plantar Fascia Problems

Your plantar fascia is the ligament that extends from the heel of your foot to the ball of your foot. If your foot flattens too much or too little as you move, you may strain your plantar fascia. While the vast majority of people with plantar fascia pain can be helped with nonsurgical treatments, surgery can be considered if these treatments fail.

Read article
Orthopedics
Hip Arthroscopy: Repairing Femoroacetabular Impingement

When excess bone forms on the edge of the ball or the socket of the hip, it's called FAI (femoroacetabular impingement). This can cause pain and limit movement. Arthroscopy can fix FAI. It uses small incisions and special tools. Read on to learn more.