2.2 Osteoarthritis + Other Muscoskeletal Conditions Flashcards
Single joints arthritis (or monoarthritis) is the acute onset of pain + swelling in a single joint. What are some of the causes of this?
Trauma
Septic arthritis (infection)
Crystal arthrtitis
Reactive arthritis (infection causing autoimmune resonse)
Osteomyelitis
Haematological conditions
Polyarthritis is pain and swelling in >5 joints or joint groups. What are some of the causes of this?
Viral illness
Osteoarthritis
Rheumatoid arthritis
Psoriatic arthritis
Lupus
In healthy bone, fractures mainly occur due to significant trauma. How are pathological fractures different?
Occur due to low trauma (falling from standing position)
Includes osteoporotic fractures, malignancy + other bone disease
Serious causes of back pain are not very common. What are some more common causes of back pain?
- Mechanical (paraspinal spasm + tenderness = limited movement)
- Disc disease such as disc prolapse + nerve root compression
- Degeneration of tendons + ligaments through overuse or injury
The gut, kidney, and organs are involved in regulating calcium. What are the regulating hormones involved?
- Parathyroid hormone (from parathyroid glands)
- Calcitonin (from thyroid glands)
How do parathyroid hormones (PTH) and calcitonin maintain calcium homeostasis?
- PTH releases Ca from bone when levels are low
- Increases conversion of vit D hormone (calcitrol) in kidney
- Calcitrol increases absorption of Ca from gut
Calcitonin = minor role inhibiting osteoclast action in response to gut hormones + high Ca (NOT ESSENTIAL)
Osteoporosis is where bone mass and bone density is decreased. It’s the result of a defect in peak bone mass and/or accelerated bone loss. What are the characteristics of peak bone mass?
Accrues up unti llate 20s
Stable in adults, but women suffer significant loss at menopause
Affected by diet, activity, smoking, and vit D levels
What are the risk factors for osteoporosis?
Age, Gender, Ethnicity
Early menopause (~1% after 30, ~5% after menopause) and/or late menarche
Family history
Lifestyle factors
Certain medications + diseases
What is osteoarthritis?
Most common arthritis
Affects fingers, hips, knees, and cervical + lumbar spine
What are the causes of osteoarthritis?
Primary = idiopathic (unknown cause)
Secondary = chronic joint trauma (repetitive joint overloading), acute joint trauma, and metabolic + neurological conditions
Obesity (loading + cytokine effects)
Joint alignment / shape
What happens to the joints in osteoarthritis?
Loss of articular cartilage
Bone architecture changes (sclerosis)
Osteophytes form at margin = limitation
Joint remodelling + bony enlargement + capsular thickening + deformity
Inflamed joints (synovitis) = not significant clinical feature
What are the clinical features of osteoarthritis?
Onset over months + years
Intermittable + variable
Pain (relieved by rest)
Restricted joint movement
Crepitus (creaking from rough surfaces)
Bony swelling + margins
Muscle weakness from reduced activity
Normal ESR / CRP + serology
What is ESR?
Erythrocyte sedimentation rate
Measures anticoagulation rate of RBCs
Elevated in inflamamtory conditions
What is CRP?
C Reactive Protein
Circualting concentration rise in response to inflammation
What is septic (infective) arthritis and how is it commonly caused?
Rapid + infective joint disease
Haematogenous spread from infection or joint wound
More common in patients with compromised immune or joint disorders