Musc 9 - Revision Flashcards

1
Q

List the key features of rheumatoid arthritis

F>M

A
  1. Morning stiffness in and around joints
  2. Symmetrical poly arthritis - typically involves small joints of the hand and/ wrist
  3. Subcutaneous nodules
  4. Rheumatoid factor
  5. Joint erosions on radiographs
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2
Q

Define rheumatoid factor

A

Antibodies that recognise Fc portion of IgG as their target antigen

Rheumatoid factor is typically IgM antibody (i.e. IgM anti-IgG antibody)

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3
Q

What substance makes synovial fluid viscous?

A

Hyaluronic acid (a non sulphated GAG)

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4
Q

Describe synovium

A

It is a 1-3 cell deep lining

Type A synoviocytes: macrophage like, phagocytic

Type B synoviocytes: fibroblast like, produce hyaluronate

Collagen is Type 1

Synovial fluid = hyaluronate rich viscous fluid

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5
Q

Define reactive arthritis

M>F,

20-40 y/o, typically asymmetrical and oligoarticular. Large joints

HLA-B27

A

Sterile inflammatory synovitis - following an infection

Extra-articular manifestations may include:

  • Enthesopathy
  • Skin inflammation
  • Eye inflammation
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6
Q

List 2 infections associated with reactive arthritis

A
  1. Urogenital infections - e.g. chlamydia trachomatis
  2. Enterogenic infections - salmonella, shigella, campylobacter infections

Reactive arthritis may be the first manifestation of HIV or Hep C

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7
Q

Define and give 2 examples of enthesopathy

A

Enthesopathy = inflammation where ligament/tendon/fascia/capsule insert into bone

e.g. Achilles tendonitis, plantar fasciitis, dactylitis, spondylitis in ankylosing spondylitis

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8
Q

What is the key pathological finding in osteoarthritis?

A

Irreversible loss of articular cartilage

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9
Q

What are the other pathological changes in OA

A
  1. Focal areas of damage to articular cartilage
  2. New bone formation at joint margins (osteophytosis)
  3. Changes in subchondral bone (sclerosis)
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10
Q

Define proteoglycan and give an example

A

Glycoproteins containing sulphated GAG chains - e.g. Aggrecan

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11
Q

Define glycosaminoglycan and give an example

A

GAG = repeating polymers of disaccharides

e.g. chondroitin sulphate (glucuronic acid and N-acetyl galactosamine) / keratan sulphate (galactose and N-acetyl glucosamine) / hyaluronic acid (glucuronic acid and N-acetyl glucosamine)

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12
Q

What is the major collagen found in articular cartilage?

What is the major proteoglycan found in articular cartilage?

A

Collagen type 2 (articular cartilage has 2 ts - type 2, bone has one in it so type 1)

Aggrecan

Articular cartilage is negatively charged so attracts a lot of water

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13
Q

List the major HLA association for each of the following diseases:

Ankylosing spondylitis and reactive arthritis

SLE

Rheumatoid arthritis

A

Ankylosing spondylitis = HLA-B27

SLE = HLA-DR3

Rheumatoid arthritis = HLA-DR4

(SLE = 3 letters do DR3)

(2 words Ankylosing spondylitis, 7 syllables avg in ankylosing spondylitis and reactive arthritis - HLA-B27)

(U will remember that u is the 4th letter in rheumatoid so DR4)

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14
Q

Summarise the composition of bone

A

Bone =composed of protein matrix (osteoid) and mineral (hydroxyapatite)

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15
Q

Define osteporosis

A

Predisposition to skeletal fractures resulting from reduction in regional or total bone mass

Has normal bone chemistry (serum Ca, PO4, PTH, alkaline phosphatase)

Assessed by DEXA, T score. -1 - -2.5 = osteopenia. < -2.5 = osteoporosis

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16
Q

Define osteomalacia

A

Osteomalacia = impaired mineralisation in mature bones. Ricket = impaired mineralisation in immature bones

Causes = Vit D deficiency, abnormal Vit D métabolism, hypophosphataemia.

Associated with low/normal serum Ca, low phosphate, secondary hyperparathyroidism (high PTH, high serum alkaline phosphatase)

17
Q

Define Pagets disease

A

Disorder of bone remodelling - unknown cause (increased bone resorption), then increased bone formation –> resulting in disorganised mosaic pattern of woven and lamellar bone

Bone chemistry = high alkaline phosphatase

Paget’s associated with increased cortical bone thickness on radiographs

Abnormal bone causes pain and bone deformity/fracture

18
Q

What are some radiological features of HPT

A
  1. brown tumours
  2. chondrocalcinosis
  3. osteosclerosis
  4. salt and pepper skull
  5. rugger-jersey spine
  6. sub-periosteal resorption
19
Q

What are the musculoskeletal disorders in chronic renal failure

A
  1. Secondary and tertiary HPT
  2. Osteomalacia
  3. Soft tissue and vascular calcification