Ch 3 - Rheumatology: Infectious Arthritides Flashcards

1
Q

What is the clinical presentation of septic arthritis?

A

– Rapid onset of moderate to severe Monoarticular, joint pain, erythema, and decreased ROM
– Leukocytosis
– Fevers/chills, sepsis

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2
Q

What is the most common joint involved in septic arthritis?

A

Knee

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3
Q

What are risk factors for septic arthritis?

A

– Age
– Prosthetic joints/foreign body
– Comorbidities such as anemia, chronic diseases, hemophilia

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4
Q

What is the most common organism causing septic arthritis in adults?

A

Neisseria gonorrhea

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5
Q

What is the most common organism causing septic arthritis in children?

A

Staphylococcus aureus

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6
Q

What are causes of septic arthritis in children?

A

Otitis

Infected IV lines

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7
Q

What are causes of septic arthritis in Neonates and > 2 years old?

A

S. aureus

Group B strep

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8
Q

What are causes of septic arthritis in 6 months to 2 years old?

A

Haemophilus influenza

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9
Q

What is the most common organism causing septic arthritis in RA?

A

S. aureus

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10
Q

What are lab findings of septic arthritis?

A

Elevated WBC, ESR, CRP

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11
Q

What are early radiographic findings of septic arthritis?

A

Soft-tissue swelling

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12
Q

What are late radiographic findings of septic arthritis?

A
Joint space narrowing
Erosions
Gas formation (Escherichia coli, Clostridium perfringens)
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13
Q

Describe normal joint fluid analysis.

A
Viscosity: high
Color: colorless
Clarity: translucent
WBC: <200
PMN%: <25
Culture: negative
Mucin clot: good
Glucose: = to blood
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14
Q

Describe non-inflammatory joint fluid analysis.

A
Viscosity: high
Color: straw
Clarity: translucent
WBC: <5,000
PMN%: <25
Culture: negative
Mucin clot: good
Glucose: = to blood
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15
Q

Describe inflammatory joint fluid analysis.

A
Viscosity: low
Color: yellow
Clarity: translucent/ opaque
WBC: 1,000-75,000
PMN%: >50
Culture: negative
Mucin clot: fair
Glucose: <50mg/dL lower than blood glucose
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16
Q

Describe septic joint fluid analysis.

A
Viscosity: variable
Color: turbid-yellow
Clarity: opaque
WBC: >100,000
PMN%: >85
Culture: positive
Mucin clot: poor
Glucose: >50mg/dL lower than blood glucose
17
Q

What are viral causes of septic arthritis?

A

Rubella

Infectious hepatitis

18
Q

When are fungus causes of septic arthritis seen?

A

Seen in immunocompromised adults

19
Q

What is Pott’s disease?

A

TB spondylitis

20
Q

What is affected in Pott’s disease?

A

Lower thoracic/upper lumbar region

21
Q

What causes kyphotic deformities in Pott’s disease?

A

Anterior vertebral body preferentially affected

22
Q

What is affected in TB arthritis?

A

Hips and knees

23
Q

What is Phemister’s triad?

A

Radiographic findings of TB arthritis
– Juxta-articular osteoporosis
– Marginal erosions
– Joint space narrowing

24
Q

What causes Lyme disease?

A

Tick-borne infection from Borrelia burgdorferi

25
Q

What is the clinical presentation of Lyme disease?

A

– Erythema migrans (“bull’s eye” rash)
– Cardiac, neurologic, articular manifestations
– Bite>rash> systemic disease> neurologic involvement
– Intermittent migratory episodes of polyarthritis

26
Q

What joint does Lyme disease commonly affect?

A

Knee

27
Q

How is Lyme disease diagnosed?

A

– Synovial fluid—inflammatory

– ELISA, Western blot analysis

28
Q

What is the treatment of Lyme disease?

A

Adults: doxycycline
Children: amoxicillin