Gout Flashcards

1
Q

What is gout?

A

Inflammatory arthritis related to hyperuricemia
Crystal arthropathy

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2
Q

What is the pathophysiology of gout?

A
  • high blood urine acid levels
  • deposition of monosodium urate crystals in joint > inflammation
  • results in acute + chronic arthritis, gouty tophi, urate nephropathy + uric acid nephrolithiasis
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3
Q

Risk factors for gout

A
  • male
  • > 40 years old
  • family history
  • obesity
  • high purine intake (meat + seafood)
  • alcohol (especially beer)
  • diuretics
  • CVD
  • smoking
  • diabetes mellitus
  • organ transplant
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4
Q

What joints are typically affected by gout?

A

Base of big toe - MTP joint
Base of thumb - CMC joint
Wrist

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5
Q

Presentation of gout

A

Acute single hot, red, swollen painful joint

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6
Q

Investigations + diagnosis of gout

A
  • diagnosis made clinically but supported by raised serum urate levels on blood test
  • joint aspiration + culture to rule out septic arthritis: raised monosodium urate crystals in gout + no bacterial growth
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7
Q

Differential diagnosis of gout

A

Septic arthritis
Psuedogout

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8
Q

Describe the aspirated joint fluid in gout

A
  • shows monosodium urate crystals
  • needle shaped + negatively birefringement of polarised light
  • no bacteria
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9
Q

X-ray features of gout

A
  • maintained joint space
  • lytic lesions in bone
  • punched out erosions with sclerotic borders + over handing edges
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10
Q

General prevention of gout

A
  • maintain optimal weight
  • regular exercise
  • diet modifications
  • reduced alcohol intake
  • smoking cessation
  • maintain fluid intake + avoid dehydration
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11
Q

Treatment of gout

A
  • first line treatment in acute gout: NSAIDs with PPI cover
  • second line: colchicine
  • third line: oral steroids e.g. prednisone
    .
  • prophylaxis with xanthine oxidase inhibitors > lower uric acid levels: allopurinol, febuxostat
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12
Q

What is first line treatment of gout?

A

NSAIDs
With PPI cover

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13
Q

Why is colchicine used in gout treatment + why is it only prescribed for a short course?

A
  • for patients who are inappropriate for NSAIDs e..g renal impairment or heart disease
  • it can cause abdominal pain + diarrhoea
  • dangerous in overdose + can cause multiple organ failure
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14
Q

What is used in prophylaxis of gout?

A

allopurinol or feboxostat
xanthine oxidase inhibitors > lower uric acid levels

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15
Q

Difference between the crystals deposited in gout + psuedogout

A

Gout - monosodium urate crystals
Psuedogout - calcium pyrophosphate crystals

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16
Q

Typical presentation of pseudogout

A

Patient over 65 with rapid onset hot, swollen, stiff + painful knee

17
Q

What joints does psuedogout affect?

A
  • knee
  • shoulders
  • hips
  • wrists
18
Q

Describe the joint aspiration fluid in pseudogout

A
  • calcium pyrophosphate crystals
  • rhomboid shaped
  • positively birefringement of polarised light
  • no bacterial joint
19
Q

X ray features in pseudogout

A

Chondrocalcinosis: calcium deposits in joint cartilage > thin white line in joint space
LOSS

20
Q

Management of pseudogout

A

Symptomatic treatment - often resolves within a few weeks
- NSAIDs + PPI
- colchicine
- steroid injections
- oral steroids