Osteoarthritis Flashcards
1
Q
What is osteoarthritis?
A
degenerative joint disease
2
Q
What happens in osteoarthritis?
A
there is loss of cartilage and subchondral bone in joints
3
Q
What joints are affected first in osteoarthritis?
A
weight-bearing joints
4
Q
Is osteoarthritis fast or slow progressing?
A
slow progressing
5
Q
What are the two forms of osteoarthritis?
A
primary and secondary osteoarthritis
6
Q
What causes primary osteoarthritis?
A
idiopathic
- wear and tear with aging plays a role
- there may be a genetic predisposition (a defect with a gene coding for proteins involved in maintaining hyaline cartilage in joints, if there is a defect the cartilage isn’t maintained and it is more easily damaged and poorly repaired)
7
Q
What causes secondary osteoarthritis?
A
- injury
- obesity (puts more stress on the joints, there may be a metabolic impact on the joints also)
8
Q
What is the pathology of osteoarthritis?
A
- chondrocytes maintain cartilage
- articular cartilage is smooth, weight bearing, dissipates force to bone (through physiologic deformation)
- (if the chondrocytes are abnormal) there is a change in the composition and properties of the cartilage
- this leads to a release of cytokines (TNF, interleukin-1)
- the cytokines trigger the release of proteases, which cause tissue destruction (this normally happens in order for normal maintenance, but it happens in excess now)
- the cartilage deteriorates, leaving bone unprotected
- the unprotected bone scleroses (the body tries to increase the density of the bone in an attempt to prevent erosion but it doesn’t help)
- synovial fluid enters cracks in the bone, leads to formation of cysts and fissures
- osteophytes form and the joint enlarges and deforms
9
Q
What are the manifestations of osteoarthritis?
A
- initially, non-localized aching pain
- later, activity-related weight bearing joint pain
- crepitus
- stiff, inflamed joints (hurts with movement, becomes still with rest)
10
Q
How is osteoarthritis diagnosed?
A
- history and presentation
- x-ray (won’t show anything in early stages)
- labs (will mostly be normal, use to rule out septic arthritis, psoriatic arthritis and gout)
11
Q
How is osteoarthritis treated?
A
- monotherapy PRN to treat pain:
i) tylenol is drug of choice
ii) 2nd choice is a cox 2 inhibitor (cox 2 is an enzyme that mediates inflammation, leads to formation of prostaglandin) - infrequently, for severe cases, inject steroids into the joint (intra articular injection)
- rehabilitation (physio)
- joint replacement surgery