Osteoarthritis Flashcards
Define osteoarthritis
Asymmetrical degenerative disease due to wear and tear of heavily used joints, resulting in loss of cartilage, sclerosis, eburnation of subchondral bone, osteophytes and subchondral cysts
Aetiology of osteoarthritis
Mechanical - wear & tear*
- localised loss of cartilage
- remodelling of adjacent bone
- associated inflammation
Primary (idiopathic): no preceding injury to the joint
- Localised: hands, knee, hip, foot
- Generalised: hands and another joint
Secondary: antecedent insult to the joint e.g. congenital abnormality (hip dysplasia), trauma, inflammatory arthropathies, strenuous physical activity
Risk factors for osteoarthritis
Age >50
Female
Obesity
Genetics
Manual occupation
Knee malalignment
High bone mineral density
Symptoms of osteoarthritis
Joint pain on movement
- Pain in the weight bearing joints (Knee, hip, distal hand, lumbar and cervical spine, Shoulder, elbow, wrist ankle)
- Associated with activities, worse after use
- Better on rest
- Pain at rest or at night is unusual (except in advanced)
Functional difficulties e.g. knee giving way or locking
Early morning stiffness (<30mins, usually 5 mins)
Swelling, some synovitis
Bony deformities on hand (from osteophytes, loss of cartilage, joint laxity)
Signs of osteoarthritis on examination
Hands
Bony deformities (tend to be painful)
- Bouchard’s nodes: enlargement of the proximal interphalangeal (PIP) joints
- Heberden’s nodes: Enlargement of the distal interphalangeal (DIP) joints
- Squaring at the thumb base
- Limited range of joint motion
Knee
Malalignment, esp. in the knee
- Genu valgum (knock-knees)
- Genu varum (bow-legs)
- Tenderness
- Crepitus
Antalgic gait (limping due to pain)
Investigations for osteoarthritis
NICE: clinical diagnosis
CRP, ESR: raised
X-ray joint:
- Loss of joint space
- osteophytes
- Subchondral cysts
- Subchondral sclerosis
MRI: cartilage loss, bone marrow lesions, meniscal tears
Management for osteoarthritis
MDT
Conservative:
- Education
- physiotherapy
- Exercise programmes e.g. resistance training, tai chi, yoga, water based
- Occupational therapy
Medication
1. Analgesia e.g. NSAIDs, opioids
2. Corticosteroid injections
3. Duloxetine
Joint replacement surgery
Complications of osteoarthritis
Functional decline and inability to perform ADLs
Spinal stenosis and cervical lumbar OA
Effusion
Prognosis for osteoarthritis
Chronic slowly progressive disease, common with advancing age
Most patients continue to have a degree of pain despite treatment
In patients who do not respond to medical and non-medical therapies, total joint replacement provides good long-term pain relief for most people