A rheumatologist is a physician who specialises in diseases of the joints, muscles, bones, and the autoimmune conditions that affect them. They're the specialists who diagnose and manage conditions like rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, Sjögren's syndrome, psoriatic arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis, vasculitis, and many others.

Not everyone with joint pain needs a rheumatologist. But there are clear clinical situations where seeing one is important, and delaying that referral can mean delayed diagnosis and avoidable disease progression.

Clear Indications for Rheumatology Referral

Inflammatory arthritis features lasting more than 6 weeks

If you have joint pain with morning stiffness lasting more than 30 minutes, symmetric small joint involvement, soft joint swelling, or fatigue, and these symptoms have persisted for 6 weeks or more, that's a direct indication for rheumatology evaluation. Don't wait for blood test results to seek a referral; the clinical picture matters as much as the numbers.

A positive ANA with symptoms

A positive ANA (antinuclear antibody) in the context of clinical symptoms suggesting connective tissue disease warrants rheumatology referral, particularly if the titre is 1:160 or higher, or if specific ENA antibodies (anti-dsDNA, anti-SSA, anti-Scl-70, etc.) are positive.

Multi-system symptoms without a clear diagnosis

If you have symptoms affecting multiple organ systems, joints and skin, joints and kidneys, fatigue and dry eyes and joint pain, and no clear diagnosis, a rheumatologist is usually the right specialist to evaluate you. Multi-system autoimmune conditions are their core expertise.

Suspected lupus

If your GP suspects lupus based on clinical features and blood tests, prompt rheumatology referral is essential. Lupus can affect the kidneys, heart, brain, and blood, and early intervention significantly improves outcomes.

Raynaud's phenomenon with autoimmune features

Raynaud's that starts after age 30, is severe, causes digital ulcers, or is associated with abnormal blood tests or other connective tissue disease features warrants rheumatology evaluation to rule out secondary Raynaud's (particularly systemic sclerosis).

Unexplained muscle weakness

Proximal muscle weakness, difficulty climbing stairs, rising from a chair, lifting arms above the head, combined with elevated CK (creatine kinase) may suggest inflammatory myopathy (myositis) and needs specialist evaluation.

Inflammatory back pain in a young person

Back pain that started before age 40, is insidious in onset, improves with exercise but not rest, and is associated with morning stiffness suggests ankylosing spondylitis or axial spondyloarthropathy. These patients should see a rheumatologist, not just a physiotherapist.

Symptoms That Don't Usually Require a Rheumatologist

To help calibrate: these features alone generally don't need a rheumatology referral:

Don't be dismissed

In many healthcare systems, waiting times for rheumatology are long and GPs sometimes hesitate to refer unless the picture is clear. If you have inflammatory features that have persisted for 6+ weeks, you have a legitimate clinical indication for referral. Ask explicitly, and if necessary, ask again.

How to Make Your Case for a Referral

When asking your GP for a rheumatology referral, be specific and prepared:

What Happens at a Rheumatology Appointment?

A first rheumatology consultation typically involves a detailed history of your symptoms, a thorough joint and physical examination, review of all existing test results, and likely ordering of additional blood tests and imaging. It may take more than one appointment to reach a diagnosis, that's normal, not a failure.

Prepare for Your Appointment

Use our tools to understand your symptom pattern before you see a specialist, and know which questions to ask.

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