Osteoarthritis and Crystalline Arthritis Flashcards

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1
Q

Describe the clinical signs and symptoms of osteoarthritis (OA)

A

Pain related to use
Pain worsens throughout day
Minimal morning stiffness

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2
Q

Describe the risk factors for OA

A
Age (75% of persons over 70 have OA)
Female sex
Obesity
Hereditary
Trauma
Neuromuscular dysfunction (can't feel pain, don't stop stressing joint)
Metabolic disorders
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3
Q

Upon investigation, what would you find in OA if you were to sample the serum of the pt and synovial fluid of an affected joint?

A

Cartilage degradation products in serum and joint fluid

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4
Q

In which joints do you typically find OA?

A
Hips
Knees
Feet (big toe joint) 
Hands
Spine (lumbosacral and cervical)
*NOT ANKLE*
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5
Q

What are Heberden’s and Bouchard’s nodes?

A

Bony outgrowths from joints of DIP (Heberden’s) and PIP (Bouchard’s)

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6
Q

Generally, how do we treat OA?

A

decrease pain to increase function

  • nonopioid analgesics
  • topical agents
  • intraarticular agents
  • opioid analgesics
  • NSAIDS

prescribe progressive exercise
weight loss
hot/cold modalities

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7
Q

Describe the changes in normal cartilage seen histologically?

A

Pits and fissuring of the cartilage surface. Smooth surface converted to jagged surface with crevasses and subsurface microcysts. No major lymphocytic infiltration.

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8
Q

Gout - pathophysiology

A
  • hyperuricemia results from either overproduction or underexcretion (more common) of uric acid, which is produced in the course of purine turnover
  • long-term hyperuricemia (>6.8mg/dl) results in the precipitation of monosodium urate (MSU) crystals (not uric acid crystals) and deposition into the joints, where inflammatory cells (esp. NTs) are activated, attracting additional inflammatory cells/mediators
  • most commonly affected joints are the distal lower extremities (lower blood supply, lower temp, more acidic - easier to precipitate) as well as the skin over extensor surfaces of UE and LE joints, and chronic gout can lead to tophi, or MSU deposits in the skin
  • contributing factors include red meat, beer, hereditary deficiency of HGPRT, and renal insufficiency (failure to excrete as much uric acid as it should)
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9
Q

Gout - clinical presentation and treatments

A
  • begins as acute monoarticular arthritis, typically reaching maximal inflammation within a day and resolving in 5-7days
  • will present with hyperuricemia, MSU crystals in synovial fluid and/or tophi samples (needle shaped crystals are negatively birefringent), and radiologic findings
  • cholchicine, indomethacine, allopurinol, febuxostat, probenecid, pegloticase (reserved for refractory tophaceous gout)
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10
Q

Calcium Pyrophosphate Dihydrate (CPPD) Crystal Deposition Disease - pathophys and etiological associations

A

aka, pseudogout (positive birefringence)

  • deposition of CPPD crystals (rhomboid) can cause spectrum of conditions ranging from asymptomatic to arthritis that mimics other arthritides
  • crystals deposit in cartilage (chondrocalcinosis), synovium, periarticular ligaments, and tendons
  • pathologic calcification related to dysregulated chondrocyte response to GF, and dysregulated chondrocyte differentiation
  • etiology unknown, most is idiopathic onset, but some early onset assoc. with ANKH mutation (chr 5)
  • high assoc. with age, primary OA, and prior joint trauma; also moderately assoc. with hereditary, systemic metabolic disease, and other conditions
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11
Q

Calcium Pyrophosphate Dihydrate (CPPD) Crystal Deposition Disease - clinical syndromes

A
  • may resemble gout, septic arthritis, OA*, neuropathic arthritis, RA, PMR, may also cause carpal tunnel syndrome, hemarthrosis, tophi deposits, and CNS disease
  • chronic degenerative arthropathy in CPPD disease commonly affects some joints that are typically spared in primary OA like the MCP joints, wrists, elbows, and glenohumeral joints
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12
Q

Calcium Hydroxyapatite Deposition Disease (HADD)

A
  • an abnormal accumulation of HA
  • can cause acute synovitis (unusual); bursitis from periarticular HA deposition; and/or joint destruction from attenuation or rupture of supporting structures (leads to instability/deformity)
  • assoc. with chronic renal failure and hypophosphatemia which enhances HA deposition in and around joints
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