Paediatric Rheumatology Flashcards

1
Q

What are the different types of juvenile idiopathic arthritis? (5)

A

Systemic

Polyarticular

Oligoarticular

Enthesitis-related

Psoriatic

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2
Q

How does systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis present? What is seen on blood tests?

A

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

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3
Q

What is the most important complication of systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis?

A

Macrophage activation syndrome

Severe activation of the immune system

Causes an acutely unwell child, DIC, non-blanching rash

LOW ESR

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4
Q

How is juvenile idiopathic arthritis managed?

A

NSAIDs

Steroids

DMARDs

Biologics

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5
Q

What is Henoch-Scholein purpura and what are the four classic features?

A

A type of IgA vasculitis

  1. Purpura
  2. Joint pain
  3. Abdominal pain (GI haemorrhage, intussusception, bowel infarction)
  4. Renal involvement (IgA Nephritis - haematuria, proteinuria)
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6
Q

How is Henoch-Schonlein purpura diagnosed?

A

Need to exclude other more serious causes of purport - meningococcal septicaemia, leukaemia, ITP, HUS

Diagnosis = urine dip, U+E, BP

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7
Q

How is Henoch-Schonlein purpura managed?

A

Mainly supportive

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8
Q

What is Kawasaki disease and what are the features?

A

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

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9
Q

How is Kawasaki disease managed?

A

High dose aspirin (reduces risk of thrombosis)

IV immunoglobulins (reduces risk of coronary artery aneurysm)

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10
Q

What is a key complication of Kawasaki disease?

A

Coronary artery aneurysm

Needs monitoring with echos

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