Septic & Reactive Arthritis Flashcards
What is reactive arthritis?
(Reiter syndrome)
- synovitis occurs in the joints as a reaction to a recent infective trigger
- unlike septic arthritis, there is NOT an infection in the joint
previously known as Reiter Syndrome
What is the typical presentation of reactive arthritis?
- it typically causes an acute monoarthritis (single joint affected, symptoms develop rapidly)
- it most commonly affects the lower limb, in particular the knee joint
- the joint is warm, swollen & painful
What is the most important differential to exclude when diagnosing reactive arthritis?
septic arthritis
- they can present similarly
- in reactive arthritis, the infective organism cannot be isolated from the joint
What are the most common infective triggers for reactive arthritis?
- gastroenteritis
- sexually transmitted infection - particularly chlamydia
gonorrhoea commonly causes a gonococcal septic arthritis
What gene is associated with reactive arthritis?
HLA B27 gene
- it is part of the seronegative spondyloarthropathy group of conditions
- this includes ankylosing spondylitis & psoriatic arthritis
What is the time course of symptom development for reactive arthritis?
- symptoms typically develop within 4 weeks of initial infection
- symptoms tend to last for around 4-6 months
What other symptoms are associated with reactive arthritis and how can they be remembered?
- non-infective bilateral conjunctivitis
- anterior uveitis
- circinate balanitis (dermatitis of the head of the penis)
- keratoderma blenorrhagica
remember the features by “can’t see, pee or climb a tree”
What is involved in the initial investigations for reactive arthritis?
!! it must be treated as septic arthritis until proven otherwise !!
- treat via the local “hot joint” policy
- antibiotics are given until septic arthritis is excluded
- a joint aspirate is sent for gram staining / culture & sensitivity testing
the joint aspirate can also be sent for crystal examination to look for gout / pseudogout
What is involved in the management of reactive arthritis?
- NSAIDs
- steroid injections into the affected joint
- systemic steroids (e.g. oral prednisolone) typically when multiple joints are affected
septic arthritis must be excluded first !!
Can reactive arthritis recur?
- most cases resolve within 6 months and DO NOT recur
- recurrent cases may require DMARDs or anti-TNF medications
sulfasalazine & methotrexate used in persistent disease