Paediatric Rheumatology Flashcards
What are the different types of juvenile idiopathic arthritis? (5)
Systemic
Polyarticular
Oligoarticular
Enthesitis-related
Psoriatic
How does systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis present? What is seen on blood tests?
AKA Still’s disease
Salmon-pink rash
High swinging fevers
Lymphadenopathy
Joint inflmmation+pain
Weight loss
SPlenomegaly
Raised ESR and CRP
Raised ferritin, raised platelets
What is the most important complication of systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis?
Macrophage activation syndrome
Severe activation of the immune system
Causes an acutely unwell child, DIC, non-blanching rash
LOW ESR
How is juvenile idiopathic arthritis managed?
NSAIDs
Steroids
DMARDs
Biologics
What is Henoch-Scholein purpura and what are the four classic features?
A type of IgA vasculitis
- Purpura
- Joint pain
- Abdominal pain (GI haemorrhage, intussusception, bowel infarction)
- Renal involvement (IgA Nephritis - haematuria, proteinuria)
How is Henoch-Schonlein purpura diagnosed?
Need to exclude other more serious causes of purport - meningococcal septicaemia, leukaemia, ITP, HUS
Diagnosis = urine dip, U+E, BP
How is Henoch-Schonlein purpura managed?
Mainly supportive
What is Kawasaki disease and what are the features?
A systemic medium-sized vasculitis
Persistent high fever (more than 5 days)
Widespread erythematous maculopapular rash
Peeling skin on palms and soles
Strawberry tongue
Cracked lips
Cervical lymphadenopathy
Bilateral conjunctivitis
How is Kawasaki disease managed?
High dose aspirin (reduces risk of thrombosis)
IV immunoglobulins (reduces risk of coronary artery aneurysm)
What is a key complication of Kawasaki disease?
Coronary artery aneurysm
Needs monitoring with echos