Paediatric Rheumatology Flashcards

1
Q

What are the symptoms of acute septic arthritis?

A
Acute onset fever
Joint pain and swelling
Ill appearance
Irritable
Tachycardia
Joint effusion
Periarticular warmth and tenderness
Pain on movement
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2
Q

What are the investigations for acute septic arthritis?

A

Elevated CRP and ESR
Raised white cells and platelets
Blood cultures- often negative
Ultrasound- helpful to identify effusion

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3
Q

How is acute septic arthritis managed?

A

Refer to orthopaedics
IV Abx
Joint aspiration

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4
Q

What is the most common rheumatological disease in children?

A

Juvenile idiopathic arthritis

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5
Q

What are the symptoms of juvenile idiopathic arthritis?

A

Arthritis for at least 6 weeks
Morning stiffness or gelling (improves with movement- opposite of septic arthritis)
Irritability or refusal to walk in toddlers
School absence or limited ability to participate in physical activity
Rash /fever
Fatigue
Poor appetite/wt loss
Delayed puberty

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6
Q

What is the difference between oligoarthritis and polyarthritis?

A

Oligoarthritis affects <5 joints and polyarthritis affects >5 joints

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7
Q

What is the differential diagnosis for JIA?

A
Septic arthritis
Osteomyelitis
Transient synovitis
Malignancies i.e lymphoma, neuroblastoma, bone tumours
Recurrent haemarthrosis
Vascular abnormalities
Trauma
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8
Q

What are the signs of JIA?

A

Swelling- periarticular soft tissue oedema/intraarticular effusion/hypertrophy of synovial membrane
Tenosynovitis (swollen tendons)
Pain
Joint held in position of maximal comfort
Range of motion limited at extremities

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9
Q

What proportion of JIA is systemic?

A

5-15%

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10
Q

What are the clinical features of systemic JIA?

A
Unwell
Arthritis
Intermittent fever >2 weeks
Salmon pink erythematous rash
Generalised lymphadenopathy
Serositis
Hepatosplenomegaly 
High inflammatory markers (ESR, CRP)
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11
Q

What investigations are useful in systemic JIA?

A

Lab tests
Plain X-ray
Ultrasound
MRI with contrast

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12
Q

How is JIA treated?

A

First line- intra-articular steroids
If poor/no response (>3/4 IA steroids needed annually) then give DMARD
First line DMARD is methotrexate
Biological agents can be used if no response to DMARD. This is most commonly an anti-TNF

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13
Q

In what kind of JIA is uveitis most common?

A

ANA positive oligoarticular

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14
Q

What are the symptoms of uveitis?

A

Usually asymptomatic but can cause:
•Red eyes
•Headache
•Reduced vision

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15
Q

What are the possible complications of uveitis?

A

Chronic uveitis
Cataracts
Glaucoma
Blindness

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16
Q

How is uveitis treated?

A

Slit lamp examination
Topical steroids to reduce inflammation
More severe cases will require systemic steroids
DMARD and biologics if poor response to steroids

17
Q

What are the possible complications of JIA?

A
Poor growth
Osteopenia
Localised growth disturbances
Micrognathia
Contractures
Ocular complications