spondylarthropathy/septic arthritis Flashcards
what are Spondyloarthropathies? what another name for it?
Group of conditions manifested by inflammatory arthritis of back
Also called seronegative arthritis
ANA and RF are negative or positive for spondyloarthropathies?
both negative
what are entheses? ethesitis?
- The enthesis (plural entheses) is the connective tissue between tendon or ligament and bone. There are two types of entheses: Fibrous entheses and fibrocartilaginous entheses
- inflammation of these tendon/ligament connection
4 kinds of spondyloarthropathies that we talked about?
- Ankylosing Spondylitis (AS – prototype)
- Reiter’s/reactive arthritis
- Psoriatic arthritis
- Arthritis of inflammatory bowel disease
7 clinical features shared (to varying degrees) by the spondyloarthropathies? (kinda weeds)
- Axial joint involvement (spinal and SI joint)
- Asymmetric peripheral arthritis
- Enthesitis (inflammation of tendon insertion
- Eye and bowel inflammation
- Preceding or ongoing infectious disorders
- HLA-B27 association
- Genital and skin lesions
what is included in the axial involvement?
Inflammatory back pain
Prolonged am stiffness in back >30 minutes
Better with exercise
Usually slow onset,
what is dactylitis?
inflammation of tendon along entire digit- looks like sausage digit
genital + skin lesions involve what?
Superficial oral ulcers, transient, painless and unnoticed Nonspecific urethritis (urethra inflamed)
what is Ankylosing Spondylitis (AS)?
Chronic, inflammatory disease of axial skeleton, progresses over decades
Involves spine, sacroiliac joints and pelvic joints
what happens eventually with AS?
- Eventual fusion of spinal vertebrae - eventually lose all spinal mobility
- Hip flexion contractures
- hyperkyphosis
who get AS?
More in men
Starts in 20s and 30s
likely pathophys of AS?
Likely autoimmune - b/c immmune suppression makes it better
PE and onset of AS ?
Inflammatory back pain and symmetrical SI pain and stiffness (morning stiffness)
Insidious onset > 3 months duration
what are the limitations in for AS?
Limitation of spinal rotation and lumbar flexion ( can’t touch toes)
3 things to look for in Dx of AS?
- Look for evidence of inflammation with blood tests (ESR, CRP, seronegative - ANA and RF negative)
- Look for sacroiliitis (inflammation in SI joint)
- Look for inflammation in vertebrae
imaging AS: what bones are first involved? is this as sign of early disease? why/why not?
SI joints: not an early sign for the disease
Inflammation of lining of joint –> once you see bony changes, a lot of damage is already done,
3 types of imaging studies for SI?
X-ray - easy, cheap, show bony changes
MRI - most sensitive
Bone Scan
what is one characteristic sign of imaging of back for AS?
“bamboo spine” - vertebrae fuse at points around the disc
Diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis (DISH) (kinda weeds) - how does it compare to AS?
Usually fewer/less severe symptoms of spinal stiffness
Looks like AS on X ray
No S-I involvement
ESR and CRP are nl
non-pharm txt for AS? (2)
PT- make sure spine fuses (b/c it eventually will) - into the correct position
surgery stabilization- may need if they fracture b/c can’t heal on their own
AS: why should we not use toxic meds unless severe disease?
b/c AS doesnt increase morbidity or mortality
3 options for pharm txt of AS
- Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory to control pain and inflammation
- Steroid injections for single joint flares
- Severe disease: Biologic agents (TNF-α)
txt for acute uveitis (very common!) with AS?
topical corticosteroids and mydriatics are usually adequate.
what is reiter’s syndrome
reiter’s a reactive arthritis : Triad of eye inflammation (Uveitis or conjunctivitis), urethritis, and oligoarthritis after infection
what is “Reactive arthritis” that doesn’t qualify as “reiter’s”
Incomplete triad:
Oligoarthritis of lower extremities within 6 weeks of infection
reiter’s and reactive arthritis ; more men or women?
men