2. MSK p209-217 (Arthritis) Flashcards
Physiological tibial bowing
Smooth, lateral, bilateral, occurs from 18 months to 2 years
Pathological causes of Tibial bowing (7)
NF-1: Anterior lateral, unilateral, hypoplastic fibula with psuedoarthritis
Foot deformities: posterior
Hypophosphatasia: Lateral (“Rickets in a newbown”)
Rickets: Lateral, widening and irregularity of growth plates.
Blount: Tibia vara - often asymmetric. Early walking, fat, black child
Osteogenesis imperfecta: Involves all long bones
Dwarfs: Short limbs
Arthritis (types) (6)
Degenerative (OA, Neuropathic).
Inflammatory (RA & Variants).
Metabolic (Gout and CPPD)
Osteoarthritis - pathophysiology (3)
Commonest arthritis.
Mechanical breakdown –> cartilage degeneration (fissures, microfractures) and fragmentation of subchondral bone (sclerosis and subchondral cysts).
Osteoarthritis - imaging (5)
Loss of joint space (not symmetric).
Subchondral cysts
Endplate changes
Vacuum phenomenon
Osteophytes.
Neuropathic joint (2)
Buzzword “Surgical like margins”.
Classically shown as bad joint followed by the reason for a bad joint.
Neuropathic joint - imaging (5)
Imaging: Deformity with Debris, Dislocation, Dense subchondral bone, Destruction of articular cortex.
Erosive osteoarthritis (inflammatory) (3)
“Gull wing” - describes central erosions.
Seen in postmenopausal women.
Favours DIO joints
Rheumatoid arthritis (4)
Characterised by osteoporosis, soft tissue swelling, marginal erosions and uniform joint space narrowing.
Often bilateral and symmetric.
Classically spares DIP joints.
Hip: OA tends to affect superior and medial, whereas RA tends to affect axially.
RA in the hands (3)
PIP joints involved AFTER MCP joints.
First CMC joint classically spared or last to be involved (OA loves first CMC).
RA eponymous syndromes (2)
Felty syndrome: RA > 10 years + splenomegaly + neutropenia
Caplan syndrome: RA + Pneumoconiosis
RA variants (4)
Psoriatic arthritis
Reiter’s syndrome (reactive arthritis)
Ankylosing spondylitis
Inflammatory bowel disease
Psoriatic arthritis (5)
Affects 30% of psoriasis patients (skin changes usually first).
Strong correlation between nail and DIP involvement.
Classically “Erosive changes with bone proliferation, IP joints > MCP joints”.
Erosions start at margins of joint and move centrally (pencil in cup).
Hands most commonly involved, then feet, then 40% get SI involvement (asymmetric)
Psoriatic arthritis buzzwords (6)
Fuzzy appearance to bone around joint (proliferation).
Sausage fingers - soft tissue swelling of fingers.
Ivory phalanx - sclerosis or bone proliferation, most commonly great toe.
Ankylosis in finger
Mouse ears
Acral osteolysis
Ankylosis in the hand DDx (5)
RA vs Psoriasis
Symmetric vs asymmetric
Proximal (MCP, carpals) vs Distal (IP joints)
No bone proliferation vs bone proliferation.
Both can cause Mutilans when severe
Reactive arthritis (2)
Similar to psoriatic arthritis, with bone proliferation and erosions and asymmetric SI joint involvement.
Reactive arthritis is rare in the hands, prefers feet.
Ankylosing spondylitis (8)
Favours spine and SI joints.
“Bamboo spine” due to early syndesmophytes from adjacent vertebral bodies.
“Shiny corners” is a buzzword for early involvement.
Susceptible to trauma.
SI joint usually first involved. Joint widens a bit before narrowing.
Can also get upper lobe predominant interstitial lung disease.
Any ank spond/DISH + minor trauma requires CT whole spine.