Week 5- Joint pain Flashcards
S.H. is a 58 year old lawyer with severe pain in his hands. “I have very bad joint pain”.
Take a history of this patient.
HPC:
• A 58 year old lawyer has severe pains in his hands. Pain is worse with movement.
• Feels very tired and has no energy over the last few months.
• Mother had arthritis and is very concerned he has arthritis too. She had to take gold and has ‘terrible, terrible side effects.’
• Pain in mainly DI (distal interphalangeal) joints, left middle finger - worst.
• Slowly worsening over the last 6-12 months (progressive).
• Not particularly worse, at night. No previous injuries. No history of Ross River fever, Dengue, Lyme disease.
• Skin rash? Yes has a history of psoriasis (importance?)
• No penile discharge, no history of STIs, no leg ulcers (importance of these in history? - think about pathogenesis).
HPC:
• Site - where is the joint pain? single/multiple joints, uni/bilateral, symmetrical/asymmetrical.
• Onset - when did the pain start?
• Character - describe the nature of the pain.
• Radiation - does the pain radiate anywhere?
• Alleviating factors i.e. movement/rest.
• Timing - experienced it before? How long did it last? Constant or intermittent? Worse at a particular time? i.e. morning/night.
• Exacerbating factors i.e. movement/rest.
• Severity.
• Associated symptoms i.e. eye symptoms, fever, malaise, fatigue, weight loss, extra-articular symptoms (e.g. nodules), pins and needles, spasms (OA, carpal tunnel), skin lesions/rash, deformities.
• Effect on lifestyle.
PMHx:
• Past medical history of arthritis, injuries, MSK injuries/fractures, STIs, psoriasis, arboviral disease?
PSHx:
• Past surgeries?
Medications:
• Any regular medications?
Allergies:
• Agent, reaction, treatment?
Immunisations:
• E.g. Fluvax, Pneumococcal.
FHx:
• Family history of arthritis, psoriasis?
SHx: • Background • Occupation • Education • Religion • Living Arrangements • Smoking • Nutrition • Alcohol/recreational drugs • Physical activity
Systems Review:
• General - weight change, fever, chills, night sweats?
• CVS - chest pain, palpitations, orthopnoea/PND?
• RS - dyspnoea, cough, sputum or wheeze?
• GI - vomiting, diarrhoea, indigestion, dysphagia, change in bowel habit, abdominal pain?
• UG - dysuria, polyuria, nocturia, urgency, incontinence, urine output?
• CNS - heachaches, nausea, trouble with hearing or vision?
• ENDO - heat/cold intolerance, swelling in throat/neck, polydipsia or polyphagia?
• HAEM - easy bruising, lumps in axilla, neck or groin?
• MSK - painful or stiff joints, muscle aches or rash?
Perform a physical exam
- BMI - 24.5.
- Looks fatigued.
- No iritis or scleritis.
- Nail pitting.
- Patches of psoriasis on scalp.
- Tar staining.
- Normal power and sensation.
- No nodules.
- Dual HS, abdo soft non-tender, no hepatomegaly, chest clear.
Psoriatic arthritis: • Occurs in 10-40% with psoriasis and can present before skin changes. • Patterns are: - Symmetrical polyarthritis (like RA). - DIP joints. - Asymmetrical oligoarthritis.
Provisional and ddx
• Provisional diagnosis: Psoriatic arthritis, may have a component of rheumatoid arthritis. • DDx: - Rheumatoid arthritis - Osteoarthritis - Gout - Psoriatic arthritis - Septic arthritis - Reactive arthritis - Carpal tunnel syndrome - Dengue - RRV - ARF - Barmah Forest - Trauma - SLE - Polymyalgia rheumatica - Fibromyalgia - Lyme disease
Ix required
FBC - ACD, increased plts in RA.
• ESR
• CRP
• Rheumatoid factor (RhF).
• Anticyclic citrullinated peptide antibodies (ACPA/anti-CCP).
• X-ray - erosive changes with ‘pencil in cup’ deformity in severe cases.
• USS/MRI - can identify synovitis more accurately and have greater sensitivity in detecting bone erosions than conventional X-rays.
Tx required
- NSAIDs
- Sulfasalazine.
- Methotrexate.
- Cyclosporin.
- Anti-TNF agents are also effective.