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Clinical Approach to Acute Arthritis Azam amini Rheumatologist Boushehr university of medical science
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Acute Arthritis The sudden onset of inflammation of the joint, causing severe pain, swelling, and redness. Structural changes in the joint itself may result from persistence of this condition.
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Signs of Inflammation Swelling Warmth Erythema Tenderness Loss of function
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Key Points Distinguish arthritis from soft tissue non articular syndromes If the problem is articular distinguish single joint from multiple joint involvement Inflammatory or non-inflammatory disease Always consider septic arthritis!
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Articular Vs. Periarticular Clinical featureArticularPeriarticular Anatomic structure Painful site Pain on movement Swelling Synovium, cartilage, capsule Diffuse, deep Active/passive, all planes Common Tendon, bursa, ligament, muscle, bone Focal “point” Active, in few planes Uncommon
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Inflammatory Vs. Noninflammatory FeatureInflammatoryNoninflammatory Pain (when?) Swelling Erythema Warmth AM stiffness Systemic features î ESR, CRP Synovial fluid WBC Examples Yes (AM) Soft tissue Sometimes Prominent Sometimes Frequent WBC >2000 Septic, RA, SLE, Gout Yes (PM) Bony Absent Minor (< 30 ‘) Absent Uncommon WBC < 2000 OA, AVN
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Acute Monoarthritis Inflammation (swelling, tenderness, warmth) in one joint Occasionally polyarticular diseases can present with monoarticular onset: (RA, JRA,Reactive and enteropathic arthritis, Sarcoid arthritis, Viral arthritis, Psoriatic arthritis)
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Acute Monoarthritis - Etiology THE MOST CRITICAL DIAGNOSIS TO CONSIDER: INFECTION ! Septic Crystal deposition (gout, pseudogout) Traumatic (fracture, internal derangement) Other (hemarthrosis, osteonecrosis, presentation of polyarticular disorders)
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Questions to Ask – History Helps in DD Pain come suddenly, minutes? – fracture. 0ver several hours or 1-2 days? –infectious, crystals, inflammatory arthropathy. History of IV drug abuse or a recent infection? – septic joint. Previous similar attacks? – crystals or inflammatory arthritis. Prolonged courses of steroids? – infection or osteonecrosis of the bone.
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Acute Monoarthritis
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Indications for Arthrocentesis The single most useful diagnostic study in initial evaluation of monoarthritis: SYNOVIAL FLUID ANALYSIS 1. Suspicion of infection 2. Suspicion of crystal-induced arthritis 3. Suspicion of hemarthrosis 4. Differentiating inflammatory from noninflammatory arthritis
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Tests to Perform on Synovial Fluid Low threshold for doing Gram stain and cultures. Total leukocyte count/differential: inflammatory vs. non-inflammatory. Polarized microscopy to look for crystals. Not necessary routinely: Chemistry (glucose, total protein, LDH) unlikely to yield helpful information beyond the previous tests.
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Septic Joint Most articular infections – a single joint 15-20% cases polyarticular Most common sites: knee, hip, shoulder 20% patients afebrile Joint pain is moderate to severe Joints visibly swollen, warm, often red Comorbidities: RA, DM, SLE, cancer,etc
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Septic Joint - Nongonococcal 80-90% monoarticular Most develop from hematogenous spread Most common: Gram positive aerobes (80%) Majority with Staph aureus (60%) Gram negative 18%
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Septic Joint - Gonococcal Most common cause of septic arthritis Often preceded by disseminated gonococcemia Sexually active individual, 5-7 days h/o fever, chills, skin lesions, migratory arthralgias and tenosynovitis persistent monoarthritis Women often menstruating or pregnant Genitourinary disease often asymptomatic
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Disseminated Gonococcemia – Pustules
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Gout Caused by monosodium urate crystals Most common type of inflammatory monoarthritis Typically: first MTP joint, ankle, midfoot, knee Pain very severe; cannot stand bed sheet May be with fever and mimic infection The cutaneous erythema may extend beyond the joint and resemble bacterial cellulitis
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Acute Gouty Arthritis
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Risk Factors Primary gout: Obesity, hyperlipidemia, diabetes mellitus, hypertension, and atherosclerosis. Secondary gout: alcoholism, drug therapy (diuretics, cytotoxics), myeloproliferative disorders, chronic renal failure.
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Urate Crystals Needle-shaped Strongly negative birefringent
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CPPD Crystals Deposition Disease Can cause monoarthritis clinically indistinguishable from gout – Pseudogout. Often precipitated by illness or surgery. Pseudogout is most common in the knee (50%) and wrist. Reported in any joint (Including MTP). CPPD disease may be asymptomatic (deposition of CPP in cartilage).
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Associated Conditions Hyperparathyroidism Hypercalcemia Hypocalciuria Hemochromatosis Hypothyroidism Gout Aging
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CPPD Crystals Rod or rhomboid- shaped Weakly positive birefringent
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Other Tests Indicated for Acute Arthritis 1. Almost always indicated: Radiograph, bilateral CBC 2. Indicated in certain patients: Cultures PT/PTT ESR 3. Rarely indicated: Serologic: ANA, RF Serum Uric acid level
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Polyarthritis Definite inflammation (swelling, tenderness, warmth of > 5 joints A patient with 2-4 joints is said to have pauci- or oligoarticular arthritis
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Acute Polyarthritis Infection Gonococcal Meningococcal Lyme disease Rheumatic fever Bacterial endocarditis Viral (rubella, parvovirus, Hep. B) Inflammatory RA JRA SLE Reactive arthritis Psoriatic arthritis Polyarticular gout Sarcoid arthritis
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Inflammatory Vs. Noninflammatory FeatureInflammatoryMechanical Morning stiffness Fatigue Activity Rest Systemic Corticosteroid >1 h Profound Improves Worsens Yes < 30 min Minimal Worsens Improves No
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Temporal Patterns in Polyarthritis Migratory pattern: Rheumatic fever, gonococcal (disseminated gonococcemia), early phase of Lyme disease Additive pattern: RA, SLE, psoriasis Intermittent: Gout, reactive arthritis
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Patterns of Joint Involvement Symmetric polyarthritis involving small and large joints: viral, RA, SLE, one type of psoriatic (the RA-like). Asymmetric, oligo- and polyarthritis involving mainly large joints, preferably lower extremities, especially knee and ankle : reactive arthritis, one type of psoriatic, enteropathic arthritis. DIP joints: Psoriatic.
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Viral Arthritis Younger patients Usually presents with prodrome, rash History of sick contact Polyarthritis similar to acute RA Prognosis good; self-limited Examples: Parvovirus B-19, Rubella, Hepatitis B and C, Acute HIV infection, Epstein-Barr virus, mumps
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Parvovirus B-19 The virus of “fifth disease”, erythema infectiosum (EI). Children “slapped cheek”; adults flu-like illness, maculopapular rash on extremities. Joints involved more in adults (20% of cases). Abrupt onset symmetric polyarthralgia/polyarthritis with stiffness in young women exposed to kids with E.I. May persist for a few weeks to months.
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Viral Arthritides - Parvovirus
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Rubella Arthritis German measles. Young women exposed to school-aged children. Arthritis in 1/3 of natural infections; also following vaccination. Morbilliform rash, constitutional symptoms. Symmetric inflammatory arthritis (small and large joints).
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Rheumatoid Arthritis Symmetric, inflammatory polyarthritis, involving large and small joints Acute, severe onset 10-15 %; subacute 20% Hand characteristically involved Acute hand deformity: fusiform swelling of fingers due to synovitis of PIPs RF may be negative at onset and may remain negative in 15-20%! RA is a clinical diagnosis, no laboratory test is diagnostic, just supportive!
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Acute Polyarthritis - RA
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Acute Sarcoid Arthritis Chronic inflammatory disorder – noncaseating granulomas at involved sites 15-20% arthritis; symmetrical: wrists, PIPs, ankles, knees Common with hilar adenopathy Erythema nodosum Löfgren’s syndrome: acute arthritis, erythema nodosum, bilateral hilar adenopathy
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Acute Polyarthritis in Sarcoidosis
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Reactive Arthritis Infection-induced systemic disease with inflammatory synovitis from which viable organisms cannot be cultured Association with HLA B 27 Asymmetric, oligoarticular, knees, ankles, feet 40% have axial disease (spondylarthropathy) Enthesitis: inflammation of tendon-bone junction (Achilles tendon, dactylitis) Extraarticular: rashes, nails, eye involvement
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Asymmetric, Inflammatory Oligoarthritis
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Enthesitis in Reactive Arthritis
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Keratoderma Blenorrhagica – Reactive Arthritis
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Reactive Arthritis - Conjunctivitis
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Reactive Arthritis – Palate Erosions
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Psoriatic Arthritis Prevalence of arthritis in Psoriasis 5-7% Dactilytis (“sausage fingers”), nail changes Subtypes: Asymmetric, oligoarticular- associated dactylitis Predominant DIP involvement – nail changes Polyarthritis “RA-like” – lacks RF or nodules Arthritis mutilans – destructive erosive hands/feet Axial involvement –spondylitis – 50% HLAB27 (+) HIV-associated – more severe
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Acute Polyarthritis - Psoriatic
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Dactylitis “Sausage Toes” – Psoriasis
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Psoriasis
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Arthritis Of SLE Musculoskeletal manifestation 90%. Most have arthralgia. May have acute inflammatory synovitis RA-like. Do not develop erosions. Other clinical features help with DD: malar rash, photosensitivity, rashes, alopecia, oral ulceration.
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Butterfly Rash – SLE
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Photosensitivity
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Alopecia - SLE
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Arthritis of Rheumatic Fever Etiology: Streptococcus pyogenes (group A); there is damaging immune response to antecedent infection – molecular cross reaction with target organs “molecular mimicry”. Migratory polyarthritis, large joints: knees, ankles, elbows, wrists. Major manifestations: carditis, polyarthritis, chorea, erythema marginatum, subcutaneous nodules.
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Erythema Marginatum – Rheumatic Fever Circinate Evanenscent Nonpruritic rash
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Rheumatic Fever – Subcutaneous Nodes
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Gouty Arthritis
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Skin Lesions Useful in Diagnosis Psoriatic plaques Keratoderma Blenorrhagicum (reactive arthritis) Butterfly rash (SLE) Salmon-colored rash of JRA, adult Still’s Erythema marginatum (Rheumatic Fever) Vesicopustular lesions (gonococcal arthritis) Erythema nodosum (acute sarcoid, enteropathic arthritis)
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Disseminated Gonococcemia – Pustules
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Keratoderma Blenorrhagica – Reactive Arthritis
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Erythema Marginatum – Rheumatic Fever Circinate Evanenscent Nonpruritic rash
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Adult Still’s Disease and JRA Rash Salmon or pale-pink Blanching Macules or maculopapules Transient (minutes or hours) Most common on trunk Fever related
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SLE – Face Rash
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SLE – Interarticular Rash Hands
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Keratoderma Blenorrhagicum
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Erythema Nodosum Sarcoidosis Inflammatory Bowel Disease – related arthritis
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Tenosynovitis and Usefulness in DD Inflammation of the synovial-lined sheaths surrounding tendons. Exam: tenderness and swelling along the track of the involved tendon between the joints. Characteristic of: Reactive arthritis, Gout, RA, gonococcal arthritis, psoriatic.
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Tenosynovitis in JRA
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Dactylitis “Sausage Toes” – Psoriasis, Reactive, Enteropathic
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Enthesitis
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Extraarticular Features Helpful in DD Eye involvement: conjunctivitis in reactive arthritis, uveitis in enteropathic and sarcoidosis, episcleritis in RA Oral ulcerations: painful in reactive arthritis and enteropathic, not painful in SLE Nail lesions: pitting (psoriasis), onycholysis (reactive arthritis) Alopecia (SLE)
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Reactive Arthritis - Conjunctivitis
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Episcleritis
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Reactive Arthritis – Palate Erosions
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Alopecia - SLE
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Nail Pitting - Psoriasis
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Nail Changes in Reactive Arthritis
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