RA & SLE tutorial Flashcards

1
Q

What is RA? What antibodies are seen?

A

Chronic joint inflammation can result in joint damage. Synovitis.
Autoantibodies: Rheumatoid factor & anti-cyclic citrullinated peptide CCP antibodies

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2
Q

What is ankylosing spondylitis? What does it usually include? Autoantibodies?

A
Chronic spinal inflammation that can result in spinal fusion & deformity. 
Site of inflammation includes enthesis. 
No autoantibodies (seronegative)
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3
Q

What are examples of seronegative spondyloarthropathies?

A

Ankylosing spondylitis, reactive arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, enteropathic synovitis (arthritis associated with GI inflammation)

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4
Q

What is SLE what does it cause? What are autoantibodies seen?

A

Chronic tissue inflammation in presence of antibodies directed against self-antigens. Multi-system inflammation mainly joints, skin & kidneys.
-Autoantibodies: antinuclear antibodies ANA, anti-double stranded DNA antibodies dsDNA, anti-phospholipid antibodies

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5
Q

What are connective tissue disorder examples?

A

SLE, sjorgen’s syndrome, autoimmune inflammatory muscle disease, systemic sclerosis - scleroderma, overlap syndrome

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6
Q

What are characteristics of connective tissue disorders? Autoantibodies? What is seen commonly?

A
  • Arthralgia & arthritis typically non-erosive.
  • Serum autoantibodies characteristic & may aid diagnosis, correlate with disease activity, may be directly pathogenic.
  • Raynauds phenomenon often common in these
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7
Q

What is raynauds phenomenon?

A
  • Intermittent vasospasm of digits on exposure to cold. From white to blue to red.
  • Vasospasm leads to blanching of digit.
  • Cyanosis as static venous blood deoxygenated.
  • Reactive hyperaemia.
  • Most commonly isolated & benign condition
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8
Q

What are anti-phospholipid antibodies associated with?

A

Also termed anti-cardiolipin antibodies.

-Associated with risk of arterial & venous thrombosis in SLE

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9
Q

What are clinical manifestations of SLE?

A

Wide ranging: malar rash (erythema sparing nasolabial fold), photosensitive rash, mouth ulcers, hair loss, raynaud’s, arthralgia & sometimes arthritis, serositis (pericarditis, pleuritis, less commonly peritonitis), renal disease (glomerulonephritis - lupus nephritis), cerebral disease (cerebral lupus eg. Psychosis)

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10
Q

What investigations are done for SLE and what is seen?

A
  • Inflammation: high ESR but CRP usually normal except infection/serositis/arthritis. Can see haemolytic anaemia, lymphopenia, thrombocytopenia.
  • Renal: look at proteinuria & albumin .
  • Immunological: ANA , anti-dsDNA, anti-phoshpholipid, low C3 & C4 in active disease.
  • Treatment can sometimes cause abnormal liver function (transaminitis) or neutropenia due to adverse drug rxn
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