Ankylosing spondylitis Flashcards

1
Q

What are the typical presentation of patient with ankylosing spondylitis?

A
  1. Young to middle age men (men > women 5:1)
  2. Back pain or back stiffness
  3. Abnormal back posture
  4. Shortness of breath
  5. Eye pain and redness
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2
Q

History taking in ankylosing spondylitis

A
  1. Back pain / back ache
    - Site: cervical / thoracic / lumbar / buttock
    - Onset: insidious > 3 months
    - Character: dull pain
    - Radiation: upper posterior thigh
    - Aggravating: worse in morning / after rest
    - Improves with activity > 30 minutes
  2. Other sites of pain
    - Shoulder and chest pain - pectoral joints
    - Hip pain - hip joints
    - Peripheral - plantar fasciitis, Archilles enthesitis
    - Radicular pain - buttocks, thighs
  3. Spinal stiffness and loss of mobility
    - Dorsal kyphosis with loss of cervical and lumbar lordosis
    - Deterioration of posture
    - Paraspinal muscle wasting
  4. Extraskeletal manifestations
    (discussed in subsequent cards)
  5. Complications of TNF-a treatment
    - PTB or hep B infection
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3
Q

Extraskeletal manifestations of ankylosing spondylitis

A
  1. Anterior uveitis - unilateral eye pain, redness, photophobia, watery eyes, blurred vision
  2. Fatigue, sleep disturbances
  3. Dactylitis - diffuse swelling of fingers and toes
  4. Atlanto-axial subluxation - restricted neck movement
  5. Anterior chest pain - costochondritis
  6. Aortic regurgitation
  7. Pericarditis and AV conduction defects
  8. Apical fibrosis
  9. Cauda equina syndrome
  10. Archilles tendonitis
  11. Amyloidosis
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4
Q

Physical examination dance for ankylosing spondylitis

A

Identifying AS
1. Inspect- facial, skeletal, dermatological abnormalities
2. Ask patient to stand up - kyphosis, loss of lordosis
3. Neck movement (turn neck up/down/left/right) - reduced cervical moement
4. Sacroiliac joint tenderness
5. Flesche’s test - unable to touch occiput against the wall
(Measure distance between wall and occiput to determine flexion deformity)
6. Schober’s test - mark posterior iliac spine, additional 10cm above and 5cm below
(On maximal forward bending, distance between upper and lower increases by >5cm in normal)

Complications of AS
7. Anterior uveitis - eye redness, pain, watery eyes
8. Reduced chest expansion
9. Aortic regurgitation - EDM over aortic region
10. Apical fibrosis - upper zone fine crepitations
11. Pacemaker scars
12. Archilles tendonitis

Very relevant negatives
12. Psoriasis - look at nails, hairline

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5
Q

What is ankylosing spondylitis?

A

Chronic inflammatory rheumatic disease of sacroiliac joints and spine > 3 months, with HLA B27
A/w morning stiffness, worse with rest and improves with exercise

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6
Q

What are the peripheral joints involved in ankylosing spondylitis?

A

Occurs in 20-30% patients with juvenile onset disease
Commonly affects: knees, hips

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7
Q

Genetics of ankylosing spondylitis

A

HLA-B27 antigen present in 95% patients with AS
(General population HLA B27 is present in 8% adults, and 6% of them developing AS)

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8
Q

Diagnostic investigations of AS

A

Diagnostic Investigations
1. Clinically - back pain, morning stiffness, relieved with exercise, worse with rest
2. XR sacroiliac joints
- Sacroilitis, fusion, sclerosis, subchondral erosions
- Syndesmophytes
- Fusion of vertebral body (bamboo spine), edge sclerosis, dagger signs
3. MRI sacroiliac joints
4. HLA-B27 testing

Investigations for Complications
5. Spirometry - restrictive pattern
6. CXR - apical fibrosis
7. ECG - conductive defect
8. TTE - aortic regurgitation

Supplementary tests
9. ESR, CRP raised
10. RF, ANCA TRO other causes

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9
Q

Differential diagnosis of back pain and stiffness

A
  1. Mechanical back pain
  2. Psoriatic arthritis
  3. Reactive arthritis
  4. Whipple’s disease
  5. Osteoarthritis
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10
Q

What is seronegative arthritis?

A

Group of overlapping conditions (PEAR) : psoriatic arthropathy, enteropathic arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis, reactive arthritis

Asymmetrical oligoarthritis, particularly affecting spine
Associated with HLA-B27 and anterior uveitis
Negative rheumatoid factor (RF)

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11
Q

Management of ankylosing spondylitis

A

Involvement of multidisciplinary team

Non-pharmacological
1. Education and genetic counselling
2. Physiotherapy and occupational therapy - preserves spinal mobility

Pharmacological
3. Analgesics and NSAIDS
4. Pulsed IV methylprednisolone may be helpful
5. +/- DMARDs - methotrexate, sulphasalazine may have some effect on peripheral disease
6. Biologics (anti-TNFa) - adalimumab, etanercept
> Allows rapid reduction in symptoms, inflammation, reduces NSAIDs dependency, but expensive

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12
Q

What is the expected prognosis/clinical course of AS

A

80% good prognosis with exercise and pain control
50% passing HLA-B27 to offspring, with offspring 20% risk of developing AS

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13
Q

Bath AS Disease Activity Index (BASDAI)
(M: SAFEMM)

A

5 major symptoms: (no problem) 1 – 10 (worst problem)
- Spinal pain
- Arthralgia or swelling
- Fatigue
- Enthesitis, inflammation of tendons and ligament
- Morning stiffness duration*
- Morning stiffness severity*
* duration and severity score is averaged

BASDAI = total score divided by 5

Range: 1 to 10
Score ≥ 4 indicates suboptimal control of disease

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14
Q

What are the complications of TNF-A injection?

A
  1. Sepsis and infection
  2. Reactivation of latent PTB or Hep B
  3. Injection site pain
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