RA & SLE tutorial Flashcards
What is RA? What antibodies are seen?
Chronic joint inflammation can result in joint damage. Synovitis.
Autoantibodies: Rheumatoid factor & anti-cyclic citrullinated peptide CCP antibodies
What is ankylosing spondylitis? What does it usually include? Autoantibodies?
Chronic spinal inflammation that can result in spinal fusion & deformity. Site of inflammation includes enthesis. No autoantibodies (seronegative)
What are examples of seronegative spondyloarthropathies?
Ankylosing spondylitis, reactive arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, enteropathic synovitis (arthritis associated with GI inflammation)
What is SLE what does it cause? What are autoantibodies seen?
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
What are connective tissue disorder examples?
SLE, sjorgen’s syndrome, autoimmune inflammatory muscle disease, systemic sclerosis - scleroderma, overlap syndrome
What are characteristics of connective tissue disorders? Autoantibodies? What is seen commonly?
- 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
What is raynauds phenomenon?
- 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
What are anti-phospholipid antibodies associated with?
Also termed anti-cardiolipin antibodies.
-Associated with risk of arterial & venous thrombosis in SLE
What are clinical manifestations of SLE?
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)
What investigations are done for SLE and what is seen?
- 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