Get Reactive Arthritis Treatment Online
Reactive arthritis causes painful joint inflammation triggered by an infection elsewhere in the body. Doctronic connects you with licensed physicians who can evaluate your symptoms and build a personalized treatment plan to reduce pain and inflammation fast.
What Is Reactive Arthritis?
Reactive arthritis is an inflammatory joint condition marked by swelling, pain, and stiffness in the joints that develops in response to an infection in another part of the body, commonly the urinary tract, gastrointestinal tract, or genitals. It can also affect the eyes, skin, and urinary tract, making it a systemic condition that goes beyond the joints alone. With the right treatment and support, most people experience significant improvement and can return to normal daily activities.
- Triggered by bacterial infections including Chlamydia trachomatis, Salmonella, Shigella, Campylobacter, and Yersinia
- Get personalized guidance from doctor-trained AI
- Explore treatment and prescription options
Is Online Reactive Arthritis Treatment Right for You?
Reactive arthritis is diagnosed based on a history of a triggering infection combined with the characteristic triad of joint inflammation, eye inflammation (conjunctivitis or uveitis), and urethritis or cervicitis, though not all three features need to be present. Online evaluation through Doctronic can help identify appropriate treatment options, including antibiotics targeting the underlying infection and anti-inflammatory medications to manage joint symptoms.
Because reactive arthritis involves the musculoskeletal system, immune response, and potentially the eyes and urinary tract, your physician will carefully review your infection history and current symptoms. Patients with a prior diagnosis, recent bacterial infection, or persistent joint pain are strong candidates for an online visit.
- Diagnosed with reactive arthritis or suspected based on recent infection
- Get personalized guidance from AI and clinicians
- Explore treatment and prescription refill options
- Access care from home, often the same day
Medications We Prescribe for Reactive Arthritis
Mobic
Meloxicam
A nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) commonly used as a first-line treatment to reduce joint pain and swelling in reactive arthritis.
AvailableVoltaren Gel
Diclofenac Topical
A topical NSAID applied directly to affected joints to relieve localized pain and inflammation with lower systemic exposure.
AvailableVibramycin
Doxycycline 100mg
An antibiotic used to treat the underlying bacterial infection, particularly Chlamydia trachomatis, that commonly triggers reactive arthritis.
AvailableAzulfidine
Sulfasalazine
A disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drug (DMARD) used for chronic or persistent reactive arthritis that does not respond adequately to NSAIDs alone.
AvailableHow Reactive Arthritis Treatment Works at Doctronic
Chat With The #1 AI Doctor
Doctronic answers your health questions with personalized medical insights and helps our doctors create a better treatment plan for you.
Meet With a Licensed Doctor For Treatment
Book a $39 telehealth appointment (or copay) within 30 minutes. Our doctors create personalized treatment plans with prescriptions when needed.
Pick Up Your Prescription
Our doctors prescribe non-controlled medications in all 50 states and send prescriptions to your pharmacy for same-day pickup.
What a Doctronic consultation looks like
Free to start, no account needed. Here's how a real Reactive Arthritis consultation unfolds.
Describe your symptoms
Type what you're feeling — no forms, no dropdowns.
Free · No account neededAI asks the right questions
Built by doctors to rule out serious conditions first.
Doctor-trained AIGet your assessment + next steps
Instant clinical assessment — then connect to a doctor if needed, no repeating yourself.
$39 doctor visit · All 50 statesPricing that won't make you sick
Chat for free, see an online doctor for $39/visit, or refill a prescription online for as low as $0
-
Available in all 50 states + DC
-
Insurance accepted
- 24/7 medical care Free
- Specialist referrals Free
- Lifelong health record Free
- Unlimited questions Free
- Prescription refills Starting as low as $0
- Video visit with real doctors $39/visit
These are stories from real users who turned to Doctronic for answers when it mattered most.
- Preparing for a doctor visit
- Finding peace of mind
- Understanding a diagnosis
- Managing chronic illness
- Navigating healthcare
- A second opinion
- Improving health
Frequently asked questions
Reactive arthritis is triggered by a bacterial infection, most commonly in the urinary tract, gastrointestinal tract, or genitals. Common culprits include Chlamydia trachomatis, Salmonella, Shigella, Campylobacter, and Yersinia. The immune response to these infections leads to inflammation in the joints, even after the original infection has cleared.
Most cases of reactive arthritis resolve within three to six months. However, some people develop a chronic form that can persist for more than a year, and a minority experience recurring episodes. Early treatment of the triggering infection and effective management of inflammation can help shorten the course of the illness.
The classic presentation involves joint pain and swelling (particularly in the knees, ankles, and feet), eye inflammation such as conjunctivitis or uveitis, and urethritis or cervicitis. Skin changes, mouth sores, and heel pain can also occur. Not all three components of the classic triad need to be present for a diagnosis.
Yes. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs such as meloxicam or diclofenac are typically the first-line treatment for managing joint pain and swelling in reactive arthritis. They help reduce inflammation and improve day-to-day function. Your physician will recommend the appropriate dose and duration based on your symptom severity.
Antibiotics are recommended when the triggering infection is still active, particularly for sexually transmitted infections such as Chlamydia trachomatis. Treating the underlying infection can help limit the immune response driving joint inflammation. However, antibiotics do not directly treat the joint inflammation itself and may not shorten the arthritis course once it has developed.
Sulfasalazine may be considered for patients with reactive arthritis that persists beyond three to six months or does not respond adequately to NSAIDs. It can help control ongoing joint inflammation and is sometimes used in combination with anti-inflammatory therapy. Your physician will assess whether a DMARD is appropriate based on your symptom history and disease course.
Doctronic uses AI-driven evaluation to gather detailed information about your symptoms and medical history. A licensed physician then reviews your case and creates a personalized treatment plan, which may include prescription medications when appropriate. The entire process is designed to be fast, thorough, and convenient.
Yes. Doctronic connects you with fully licensed physicians whose consultations are doctor-reviewed and audited for quality. The platform is HIPAA-compliant, ensuring your health information is kept private and secure. Care is available to adults 18 and older in any U.S. state.
Top Conditions We Can Help With
People turn to Doctronic and our licensed medical team for support with all types of conditions.