Seronegative arthritis Flashcards

1
Q

What is rheumatoid factor?

A

Immune cells that attack healthy cells in the body

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2
Q

What are general features of seronegative arthritis?

A
Negative rheumatoid factor
May be associated with HLA-B27
Usually asymmetric
Involvement of axial skeleton
Enthesitis
Extra-articular features - uveitis, IBD
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3
Q

What are different clinical presentations of seronegative arthritis?

A

Ankylosing spondylitis
Psoriatic arthritis
Bowel related arthritis (Crohn’s, UC)
Reactive arthritis

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4
Q

What is spondyloarthropathy?

A

Disease of the joints of the vertebral column

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5
Q

What is ankylosing spondylitis?

A

Chronic inflammatory rheumatic disorder with a predilection for axial skeleton and entheses

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6
Q

What is an enthesis?

A

Connective tissue between tendon/ligament and bone

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7
Q

What is the normal age of onset for ankylosing spondylitis?

A

Second to third decade of life

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8
Q

Is ankylosing spondylitis more common in males or females?

A

Males

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9
Q

What is the Modified Schober Test?

A

Mark a line connecting both posterior superior iliac spines
Make a mark 10cm above this line
Patient bends forward maximally - distance between 2 marks is measured
Report increase to the nearest 0.1cm
Best of two tries

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10
Q

How is lateral spinal flexion assessed?

A

Heels and back against a wall - no flexion in knees and no bending forward
Place a mark on the thigh, bend sideways without bending knees or lifting heels, without moving shoulders or hip
Place a second mark and record the difference
Best of 2 tries on each leg

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11
Q

How is occiput/tragus to wall measured for spinal mobility?

A

Heels and back rest against wall
Chin at normal level
Maximal effort to move the head against the wall
Report best of 2 tries for occiput to wall distance and mean of left and right tragus to wall distance

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12
Q

How is cervical rotation assessed?

A

Patient sits on a chair, chin at usual level, hands on knees
Assessor places a goniometer at top of head in line with the nose
Patient rotates neck maximally to one side, followed with goniometer
Angle between sagital plane and new plane is recorded
2 readings are taken for each side
The mean of each side is recorded

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13
Q

What are clinical features of ankylosing spondylitis?

A

Inflammatory back pain
Limitation of movements in antero-posterior as well as lateral planes at lumbar spine
Limitation of chest expansion
Bilateral sacroiliitis on X-rays

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14
Q

What is grading for Radiographic sacroiliitis?

A

Grade 0 - normal
Grade 1 - suspicious change
Grade 2 - Minimal abnormality - small localised areas with erosion or sclerosis without alteration in joint width
Grade 3 - unequivocal abnormality - moderate or advanced sacroiliitis with one or more of: Erosions, evidence of sclerosis, widening, narrowing, or partial ankylosis
Grade 4 - severe abnormality - total ankylosis

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15
Q

What are features of ankylosing spondylitis outside of the axial skeleton?

A

Peripheral joints - hips, shoulders, knees
Achilles tendonitis, dactylitis
Uveitis
Cardiac - aortic incompetence, heart block
Pulmonary - Restrictive disease, apical fibrosis
GI - IBD
Osteoperosis and spinal fractures
Neurological - autoimmune autistic disorder, cauda equina syndrome
Renal - secondary amyloidosis

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16
Q

How is ankylosing spondylitis managed?

A
Physiotherapy
NSAIDs
Disease modifying antirheumatic drugs
Anti-TNF
Anti-IL-17
Treatment of osteoperosis
Surgery - joint replacements
17
Q

What joints are commonly affected by psoriatic arthritis?

A
Neck
Shoulder
Elbows
Base of spine
Wrists
Knees
Ankles
18
Q

How is psoriatic arthritis treated?

A
Sulfasalazine
Methotrexate
Leflunomide
Cyclosporine
Anti-TNF therapy
Anti-IL-17/23 
Steroids
Physiotherapy and occupational therapy
19
Q

What is reactive arthritis?

A

Sterile synovitis after distant infection

20
Q

What infections can cause reactive arthritis?

A

Salmonella, shigella, yersinia, campylobacter, chlamydia trachomatis, pneumoniae, borrelia, neisseria, streptococci

21
Q

What location of infection can cause reactive arthritis?

A

Throat, urogenital, GI

22
Q

What are non-MSK features of reactive arthritis?

A

Circinate balanitis
Urethritis
Conjunctivitis
Iritis

23
Q

How is acute reactive arthritis treated?

A

NSAIDs
Joint injection
Antibiotics in chlamydia infection

24
Q

How is chronic reactive arthritis treated?

A

NSAIDs

Disease modifying antirheumatic disease

25
Q

What is enteropathic arthritis?

A

Arthritis associated with IBD

26
Q

How is enteropathic arthritis treated?

A
Steroids
Sulfasalazine
Methotrexate
Anti-TNF
Bowel resection may alleviate peripheral disease