If you're struggling with joint pain, you've probably heard about cortisone injections. They work, right? But there's a hidden cost: cortisone provides temporary relief while actually damaging cartilage over time. PRP therapy offers a fundamentally different approach—it regenerates tissue instead of suppressing inflammation, providing longer-lasting relief without the progressive joint damage cortisone causes. At Ivie Health in Syracuse, understanding this critical difference helps patients make informed decisions about their joint health.
How Cortisone Injections Work (and Their Cost)
The Mechanism: Aggressive Anti-Inflammation
Cortisone is a powerful corticosteroid that suppresses the immune system and inflammatory response. When injected into a joint, cortisone dramatically reduces inflammation, leading to rapid pain relief. Most patients feel better within 24-48 hours, with peak relief at 3-7 days.
This rapid effect makes cortisone appealing. After weeks of pain, significant relief in 1-2 days seems miraculous. But the mechanism creates long-term problems.
The Hidden Problem: Accelerated Cartilage Degeneration
Here's what most patients don't know: cortisone doesn't just suppress destructive inflammation. It suppresses healing inflammation too. This prevents your body from mounting an effective repair response to joint damage. Multiple studies show cortisone injections actually accelerate cartilage degeneration.
Duration Limitation
Cortisone effects typically last 2-4 weeks, with most patients needing re-injection every 3-4 weeks to maintain pain relief. This frequent administration requirement increases cumulative damage risk.
Injection Frequency Guidelines
Due to cartilage damage risk, most orthopedic specialists now recommend limiting cortisone injections to no more than 3 per year in any given joint. After 3 injections annually, continued cortisone use has diminishing returns while damage continues accumulating.
How PRP Therapy Works Differently
The Mechanism: Triggering Healing, Not Suppressing Inflammation
PRP doesn't suppress inflammation—it channels inflammation toward healing rather than destruction. Growth factors in PRP activate your body's repair mechanisms, triggering regeneration of damaged cartilage, ligaments, and tendons.
This fundamental difference changes everything. Instead of masking pain while damage worsens, PRP addresses root causes. Tissue actually heals.
Gradual Onset, Lasting Results
Unlike cortisone's immediate effect, PRP shows gradual improvement over weeks. Initial pain reduction occurs in 2-4 weeks as inflammation resolves. Tissue regeneration continues for 3-6 months, with peak benefits around 12 weeks. Results typically last 12-24 months or longer, far exceeding cortisone's brief window.
Safe Repetition
Unlike cortisone, PRP can be safely repeated. Many patients do maintenance PRP injections 1-2 times yearly to sustain results. No cumulative damage occurs; repeated treatments actually compound benefits as tissue continues regenerating.
Direct Comparison: Cortisone vs. PRP
Cortisone Injections
Mechanism: Suppresses inflammatory response (both destructive and healing)
Onset: 24-48 hours
Duration: 2-4 weeks typically
Pain Relief: 70-80% of patients
Effect on Tissue: Accelerates cartilage degeneration; does not regenerate
Long-term Outcome: Progressive joint deterioration; worsening over years
Frequency Limit: No more than 3 per year recommended
Side Effects: Local tissue atrophy, facial flushing, temporary blood sugar elevation, rare infection
Cost: $200-$500 per injection
Best for: Acute flare-ups needing rapid relief; short-term pain management
PRP Therapy
Mechanism: Activates healing cascade via growth factors (promotes regeneration)
Onset: 2-4 weeks gradual improvement
Duration: 12-24 months typically
Pain Relief: 60-90% of patients depending on condition
Effect on Tissue: Regenerates cartilage, strengthens ligaments, improves joint health
Long-term Outcome: Improved tissue quality; degeneration slowed or reversed
Frequency Limit: Can be repeated indefinitely; typically 1-2 times yearly for maintenance
Side Effects: Minimal; occasional injection site soreness, mild swelling; no systemic effects
Cost: $3,000-$6,000 per treatment (often less per month than repeated cortisone)
Best for: Long-term joint health; early-to-moderate osteoarthritis; cartilage damage
Cortisone vs. PRP: Outcome Comparison
Year 1 Outcomes
Cortisone: Multiple injections needed (3-4 per quarter). Initial relief is dramatic, then deteriorates between injections. By year-end, many patients report worsening baseline pain.
PRP: 1-3 injections needed. Initial improvement is gradual but steady. By year-end, most patients maintain significant pain relief and improved function. Cartilage quality improved on imaging.
Year 2-3 Outcomes
Cortisone: Cumulative cartilage damage becomes evident. Pain control increasingly difficult despite escalating injection frequency. Many patients pursue surgery as only remaining option.
PRP: Benefits sustain or improve. Maintenance PRP 1-2 times yearly maintains and compounds results. Joint health visibly improved. Surgery becomes less necessary.
When Each Approach Makes Sense
Cortisone: Limited Appropriate Use
Cortisone has narrow but real applications:
- Acute flare-ups: Severe inflammation causing severe functional loss, where rapid relief is critical
- Bridge therapy: Temporary pain control while waiting for PRP appointments or allowing time for physical therapy to improve strength
- Very limited use: Emergency relief in specific situations, not ongoing management
Modern medicine increasingly views cortisone as a short-term tactical tool, not a long-term strategy.
PRP: The Long-Term Solution
PRP is the clear choice for patients wanting sustained pain relief and improved joint health:
- Early-to-moderate arthritis: Slows degeneration and regenerates cartilage
- Chronic joint pain: Addresses root causes instead of masking symptoms
- Ligament and tendon injuries: Heals tissue damage completely
- Active individuals: Improves tissue quality, allowing return to sport and activity
- Surgery-seeking patients: Often avoids or delays surgery need
The Real Cost Analysis
Cortisone seems cheaper initially ($200-$500 per injection), but ongoing costs are deceptive. A patient needing 4 cortisone injections yearly spends $800-$2,000 annually—with progressive joint deterioration requiring eventual surgery costing $15,000-$35,000.
PRP at $5,000 per treatment (often split across 2-3 injections) provides a year or more of relief. Adding 1-2 annual maintenance injections ($3,000-$6,000) provides sustained improvement while avoiding surgery.
Long-term, PRP saves money while preserving joint integrity. Cortisone saves money short-term while creating expensive surgical needs later.
Combining Approaches Strategically
In some cases, cortisone and PRP can be strategically combined. For example, a patient with severe acute inflammation might receive cortisone for rapid relief, then PRP 2-4 weeks later once acute inflammation resolves. This allows aggressive downregulation of acute inflammation while preserving healing response for PRP-triggered regeneration.
This combination strategy uses each approach's strengths while minimizing downsides. Our clinical team at Ivie Health can recommend optimal sequencing based on your specific situation.
Ready to Choose the Better Path for Your Joints?
Schedule your PRP consultation with Dr. Fawole to discuss which approach is right for you.
Learn More About Joint TherapyFrequently Asked Questions: PRP vs. Cortisone
Yes, but timing matters. Wait 2-4 weeks after cortisone injection before starting PRP. This allows acute inflammation to settle while preserving your body's natural healing response that PRP will enhance. Our clinical team will recommend optimal timing.
Cortisone has longer clinical history (used for decades) and provides immediate relief that satisfies some patients short-term. PRP is newer, requires longer timeframe for results, and requires more sophisticated technique for proper application. Many physicians simply haven't trained in regenerative approaches yet.
It depends on your specific plan and the indication. Many insurance companies now cover PRP for osteoarthritis, meniscal injuries, and ligament problems due to superior long-term outcomes. Our team will verify your coverage and submit appropriate documentation for approval.