Arthritis Flashcards
Define osteoarthritis
A degenerative joint disease. A clinical syndrome of joint pain accompanied by functional limitation and reduced QOL.
What is the difference between primary and secondary OA?
Secondary has known etiology
What are the main characteristics of OA?
- OA is a chronic disease of the MSK system without systemic involvement
- OA is mainly a non-inflammatory disease of synovial joints
- No joint ankylosis is observed in the course of the disease
What are the risk factors of arthritis?
- Obesity
- Past injury in a joint
- Occupational factors
- Genetics
- Increases with age
What are the signs and symptoms of arthritis?
- Joint pain
- Crepitis
- Joint deformity
- Osteophytes
- Joint stiffness
Describe the differences between a healthy hip and a hip with OA
Healthy - bone covered with cartilage, acting as a cushion so the joint functions without pain
Diseased - wear and tear leads to bone-on-bone contact, soreness and swelling.
Compare and contrast RA with OA
RA- Can happen at any age, rapid onset, affects small joints of hands and feet, stiffness is worse in the morning, causes fatigue, fever and night sweats.
OA - Usually later in life, slow onset, initially asymmetrical, weight bearing joints, knees, hips and stiffness is worse at the end of the day.
What signs of OA are seen on an X-ray?
- Subchondrial sclerosis
- Osteophytes
- Narrowing of joint space
- Subchondrial bone cysts
What investigations can be done in OA?
- FBC
- U&E’s
- LFT
- ESR (erythrocyte sedimentation rate)
- CRP
What changes occur in articular cartilage due to OA?
- Increased tissue swelling
- Change in colour
- Cartilage fibrillation
- Cartilage erosion down to subchondral bone