QUICK RECALL Flashcards
1
Q
Multiple types = o Stills disease (systemic JIA) o Polyarticular JIA o Oligoarticular JIA (Pauci-articular JIA) o Juvenile Ankylosing Spondylitis o SLE o Lyme Disease
these are examples of?
A
JIA
2
Q
- Features
o Inflammation – lymph glands, spleen, pericarditis, pleuritis, joints
o Extreme fatigue, high spiking fevers, salmon colored rash that comes and goes
o Arthritis – FOR AT LEAST 6 WEEKS
o Poor appetite, nausea, weight loss - Precise cause not yet known
- Lab Tests
o Elevated = WBCs, ESR, CRP, Ferritin
o Decreased = RBCs
o Negative = RF (rheumatoid factor), ANA (for SLE) - Treatment – NSAIDS, DMARDs, Immunosuppressant’s
A
Systemic JIA (Stills Disease)
3
Q
- Features
o Affects small joints (hands and feet) but can involve large joints; usually symmetrical
o Affects > 4 joints w/ pain lasting > 6 weeks
o To meet diagnosis criteria it needs have ^ to occur w/in the first 6 months of illness
o Begins before 16 yrs old and may have history of chronic anterior uveitis - Signs
o Limp, joint swelling, fever, light pink rash, and it MAY involve heart, liver, spleen, and lymph
nodes (different than still which does and is more systemic)
- Labs o RF (-) form = 5 or more joints in first 6 months o RF (+) form = 5 or more joints in first 6 moths ß (+) form is much more aggressive o Elevated = ESR, CRP, Ferritin, WBCs o Decreased = RBCs
- Treatment – NSAIDS, DMARDS
A
Polyarticular JIA
4
Q
- MOST common form of JIA (F>M)
- Peak incidence is 2nd and 3rd yrs of life
- Features
o Morning stiffness, mild discomfort, limp, swelling and warmth of affected joints
§ Leg length discrepancy most common
§ At risk for chronic anterior uveitis
o Fewer than 4 joints are affected for the entire course - Labs
o Positive ANA, elevated WBC w/o signs of infection, hypoalbuminemia w/o proteinuria
o Xray – soft tissue swelling w/in joints, if chronic then bone erosion - Treatment – NSIADS and DMARDS but has good prognosis and will remit on its own
A
Oligoarticular JIA (Pauci-articular JIA)
5
Q
- Features
o Enthesopathy and arthritis of large joints in the lower extremities
o Ankylosing tarsitis of the ankle is common - Duration
o Long term - Cause is unknown
- Diagnostic Criteria
o MUST HAVE 2 of the following
§ Persistent sacroiliac tenderness &/or inflammatory lumbosacral pain
§ Positive HLA-B27; Negative RF and ANA
§ Acute symptomatic anterior uveitis
§ 1st degree relative w/ a history of AS, ERA, sacroilitis with IBD, reactive arthritis, or acute
anterior uveitis
A
Juvenile Ankylosing Spondylitis
6
Q
- Most common in females, African Americans, Asians, Hispanics and those w/ 1st degree relative w/ SLE
- Peak onset in early teens and rare <5 yrs
- Features
o Aberrant B cell formation and increased production of specific and non-specific autoantibodies
w/ immune complex formation and deposition
§ Fever, malar rash, photosensitivity, arthritis (small joints of hands and feet) - Diagnosis
o 4 or more criteria, 1 clinical, and 1 laboratory OR biopsy proven lupus nephritis w/ a (+) ANA
o MD Please Offer All RNs A Holiday Immediately
§ Malar rash, discoid rash, photosensitivity, oral ulcerations, arthritis, renal issues,
neurologic issues, serositis, ANA +, hematologic abnormalities, immune autoantibodies - Treatment - No permeant cure, goal is to reduce symptoms
A
SLE
7
Q
- Features
o Erythema migrans in early disease and in early disseminated disease there is multiple erythema
migrans w/ cranial nerve palsies, and carditis
o Late disease à arthritis, polyneuropathy, encephalopathy - Labs
o Positive Lyme ELISA test confirmed by positive western blot - Treatment - Doxycycline or amoxicillin
A
Lyme Disease
8
Q
- Features
o Defined as arthritis w/ psoriasis or arthritis w/ 2 of the following
§ Dactylitis, nail abnormalities, family history of psoriasis in 1st degree relative
o Presentation
§ Asymmetric arthritis affecting both large and small joints
§ Psoriasis on extensor surfaces
A
Psoriatic Arthritis
9
Q
- Features
o Bone or joint infection confined to the synovium of a joint affects the hip, knee, ankle
§ May present w/ clinical signs of bacteremia (fever, high WBC, ESR, CRP)
§ Usually joint effusion
o Most common in childhood, boys > girls
o Staph is the most common cause - Radiographic Evaluation
o Infections of peripheral joints are readily diagnosed by arthrocentesis
A
Septic Arthritis
10
Q
- Result of infection
- Most common in the 1st decade of life due the rich metaphyseal blood supply
o Location is in the metaphysis - Causes
o S. Aureus most common cause in all children
o Group B Strep most common in neonates
o Pseudomans most common in direct puncture
o TB most common to have extrapulmonary involvement
o Salmonella most common in sickle cell patients - Pathophysiology
o Spread through bone occurs via haversian and Volkmann canal systems
o Purulence develops in conjunction w/ osteoblast necrosis, osteoclast activation, the release of
inflammatory mediators, and blood vessel thrombosis
§ Subperiosteal abscess develops when the purulence breaks through the metaphyseal cortex - History
o Limb pain, recent local infection, immunizations - PE
o Edematous, warm, swollen, tender limb, evaluate for point tenderness - Radiographs
o AP and Lateral and will see new periosteal bone formation 5-7 days later w/ osteolysis 10-14
days later - CT and MRI – MRI will show marrow edema
- Labs
o CRP will be elevated in 6 hrs and will be elevated in 98% of cases = MOST sensitive to monitor
therapeutic response (tells you your treatment is working if going down)
o ESR is elevated
o Bone Aspiration = definitive diagnosis - Treatment
o Empric Antibodies for IV 4-6 weeks
o Can do surgery if it is out of control - Complications
o DVT (Risk factors = CRP > 6, surgical treatment, >8 yrs of age)
o MRSA, Meningitis, Chronic OM, Septic arthritis, Growth disturbances of limb if growth plate
involvement, Pathologic factors - Clinical Features Suggestive of Bone Infection
o Constitutional symptoms
o Less than 14 days of signs and symptoms
o Focal symptoms and signs of inflammation in a previously healthy child
o Limitation in function
o Elevated ESR and CRP
A
Pediatric Hematogenous Osteomyelitis
11
Q
- Intraosseous abscess related to a focus of subacute pyogenic OM
o Most common form of the subacute OM - S. aureus is the most common cause
- M>F
- Location
o Predilection for metaphysis
§ Occurs w/ unfused epiphyseal plates (but rarely traverses them)
o Proximal/distal tibial metaphysis - Radiographic Features
o Lytic lesion in oval configuration oriented along the long axis of bone
o Surrounded by thick rim of sclerotic bone
o MRI
§ Penumbra sign – differentiates subacute OM from other bone lesions
• Rim lining of an abscess cavity w/ higher signal intensity
A
Brodies Abscess