Arthritis Flashcards
Define OLIGO and POLY arthritis:
Oligo = 2-4 joints
Poly = >4 joints
Main differentials for arthritis’:
- Mono
- Oligo
- Poly
1- Distribution
2- Inflamm or non-inflamm?
3- Infectious or non-infectious?
___________
MONO
- Septic arthritis
- Crystal: Gout, CPP
- Haemarthrosis
- Trauma (meniscal, FB)
- Mono presentation of oligo/poly disease
OLIGO
- Reactive arthritis (Reiter’s- STI, enteric)
- Gonococcal (migratory)
- Sickle cell crisis (hip necrosis)
POLY (>4)
- Rheumatoid
- SYSTEMIC: - SLE, IBD, Psoriatic
- VASCULITIS: HSP, Kawasaki
- INFECTIVE: Gonococcal, Viral (Parvo, Ross River)
- POST INFECTIVE: Rheumatic Fever
- Serum sickness
- Leukaemia
REACTIVE Arthritis:
AKA Reiter’s Syndrome
Adult men
CAUSES:
2-4 (up to 12) weeks following an infection. Commonly:
STI: Chlamydia
Food poisoning: Campylobacter, salmonella, shigella
PRESENTATION
TRIAD:
1- Arthritis (asymmetric oligo/poly)
2- Urethritis
3- Conjunctivitis
Can’t see, can’t pee, can’t climb a tree
NSAIDs, steroids, DMARDs
50% recurrent, 30% become chronic
JOINT features of Rheumatoid Arthritis:
Symmetrical, polyarticular
Cervical: AtlantoAxial instability (tranv lig)
Hands: Swan-neck, Boutonniere, Z-thumb, Wrist: ulnar deviation, carpal tunnel
Hip
Knees
EXTRA-ARTICULAR features of Rheumatoid Arthritis:
- Purpura, petechiae, rheumatoid nodules
- Cervical myelopathy, peripheral neuropathy
- Scleritis, conjunctivitis, keratitis (incl ulcerative)
- Pulmonary fibrosis, restrictive lung disease, pleural effusion, pulmonary nodules
- Restrictive pericarditis, valve pathology, IHD
- Renal failure
- Tenosynovitis
- Vasculitis
- Immunosuppression
Diagnostic criteria for Rheumatoid Arthritis:
General categories:
- Arthritis distribution
- Serology (rheum factor) positivity
- Inflamm markers: ESR/CRP
- Duration ? >6weeks
Which serology should be done to diagnose Rheumatoid Arthritis:
Rheumatoid factor (75%)
Anti-CCP (more specific + prognostic)
What are the main DMARDS in Rheumatoid Arthritis? What are main adverse effects?
Methotrexate
Cyclophosphamide
Cyclosporin
Leflunomide
Sulfasalazine
Hydroxychloroquine
Azathioprine
‘Mabs (biologics)
_____
- Immunosuppression
- Bone marrow suppression incl. neutropaenia
- Lung injury (pneumonitis)
- Transaminitis
- Steven’s Johnson
GOUT: about
MEN, 30-60
Monosodium urate crystals –> inflamm
From hyperuricaemia:
- Production: Purine (beer, shellfish), tumour lysis
- Excretion: CKD, thiazide, aspirin
CLINICAL
- Triggers:
–> ETOH or purine binge
–> Dehydration
–> Illness or stress
- 1st MTP (75%) (‘Podagra’)
- +/- fever
GOUT: management of acute exacerbation
NSAID for 5 days
Eg. Celecoxib 100mg BD
Naproxen 250mg TDS
OR
COLCHICINE 500microg TDS for 4 days
OR
PREDNISOLONE 50mg daily for 3 days, then wean.
Or, intra-articular inj.
…Avoid aspirin, diuretics, purines, stopping allopurinol.
When is aspiration indicated in suspected gout?
NOT required if first presentation of typical Podagra (or typical, recurrent gout Hx)
Calcium Pyrophosphate Deposition Disease:
eg. Pseudogout
WOMEN >65
UPPER limb more common, but usually knee
Spontaneous, not triggered.
Often also causes tenosynovitis or bursitis and chrondrocalcinosis on Xray
MANAGEMENT
- Analgesia, NSAIDs, steroids
- Aspiration often relieves
Haemarthrosis
Dense effusion
May ‘settle’ on lateral
If THREE densities seen: lipohaemarthrosis
Spont vs traumatic
R.I.C.E
Immobilise 72 hours
Therapeutically aspirate only if difficult to manage pain (may need to do diagnostically anyway)