AS Flashcards
Briefly define the term ankylosing spondylitis.
An uncommon systemic inflammatory disorder characterised by:
a. pain and stiffness
b. stiffening and fusion of the spine and sacroiliac joints
Discuss the pathology of ankylosing spondylitis.
Two basic lesions are seen:
a. Synovitis
• especially vertebral facet joints, sacroiliac joints and costovertebral joints
• synovitis results in the destruction of articular cartilage and periarticular bone
b. Inflammation at the fibro-osseous joints of syndesmoses, especially:
• I/V discs
• manubria sterni
• bony insertions of large tendons & ligaments
• sacroiliac ligaments
• symphysis pubi
Discuss the 3 stages of pathology in AS.
Stage 1 (inflammation)
• Inflammation of fibrocartilage in cartilaginous joints, followed by changes in the fibrous tissue of the joint capsule, cartilage that surrounds the IV/discs, entheses (enthesitis) and periosteum.
o infiltration by inflammatory cells
o granulation tissue formation
o erosion of adjacent bone and fibrocartilage
Stage 2 (Repair):
• Replacement of granulation tissue by fibrous scar tissue (ie inflammation subsides; healing by fibrosis occurs).
Stage 3 (Ossification)
• Reactive new bone formation in:
o articular bone (results in sclerosis)
o adjacent ligaments
o other joint structures
• Ossification of the fibrous tissue of the joint cause ankylosis of the joint.
Discuss the articular manifestations of ankylosing spondylitis.
- Pain
- Peripheral Arthritis
- Decr. ROM and deformity of spine
Discuss the extra-articular manifestations of ankylosing spondylitis.
- Extra articular manifestations
a. anterior uveitis
b. aortic valvular incompetence (1-2% of longstanding cases)
c inflammatory bowel disease especially Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis. - Respiratory problems (fibrosis following inflammation)
- Fever, fatigue, anorexia, weight loss, anaemia.
- Neurological symptoms and signs from:
a. compression radiculitis
b. vertebral fracture
c. vertebral subluxation
d. cauda equina syndrome
Briefly describe the radiological manifestations of ankylosing spondylitis.
- Cardinal sign: erosion and fuzziness of SI joints and periarticular sclerosis (eventually bony ankylosis occurs).
- Vertebral changes: flattening of vertebral body concavity (squaring).
- Ossification across the I/V discs creates “syndesmophytes” which span the IVD gaps of vertebrae.
- Bridging at several levels results in a “bamboo spine” appearance.
- Spotty ligamentous ossification.
List three laboratory investigations that could be used in the diagnosis of ankylosing spondylitis.
- ESR is usually elevated in active phases.
- HLA-B27 is positive in 90% of patients.
- RF tests negative.