Rheumatoid Arthritis Flashcards

1
Q

The onset of rheumatoid arthritis is

A

25-55 years old

can occur at any age

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2
Q

Rheumatoid arthritis is more prevalent

A

in women

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3
Q

The etiology of rheumatoid arthritis is

A

unknown but includes

environmental, heredity, viral/bacterial infection, and rheumatoid factors

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4
Q

Describe the differences between osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis

A
OA: 1. degenerative disease
2. morning stiffness lasting less than 30 minutes
3. asymmetrical 
4. cartilage loss
RA: 1. autoimmune disease
2. morning stiffness lasting more than 30 minutes
3. symmetrical
4. inflamed synovium
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5
Q

Clinical manifestations of rheumatoid arthritis include

A

joint involvement
TMJ- synovitis, 45-75% involvement
Nerve entrapment- carpal tunnel syndrome

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6
Q

Describe how rheumatoid arthritis involves joint involvement

A

most often affects hands, feet, and wrists

  1. inflammation of synovial joint membrane
  2. rapid division and growth of cells in the joint
  3. release of osteolytic enzymes, collagenases, and proteases
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7
Q

The atlantoaxial instability can cause

A

C1-C2 involvement- need to provide inline stabilization
atlanto-odontoid separation- can impinge on the spinal cord and cause neurological involvement
atlantoaxial subluxation- can decrease blood flow through vertebral arteries

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8
Q

The cricoarytenoid joint is

A

impacted in 26-86% of patients with severe RA

may see vocal cord nodules or polyps, and may see an obstruction in a fixed position

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9
Q

Involvement of the cricoarytenoid joint typically presents

A

without clinical symptoms

or may see hoarseness, pain with swallowing, stridor, or dyspnea

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10
Q

Systemic involvement of RA involves

A

pulmonary, cardiac, eyes, and muscle

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11
Q

Describe the pulmonary involvement of RA

A

pleural effusion, pneumonitis, pulmonary nodules

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12
Q

Describe the cardiac involvement of RA

A

pericarditis, pericardial effusion, mitral/aortic regurgitation, conduction defects

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13
Q

Describe the eye involvement of RA

A

destruction of lacrimal and salivary duct

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14
Q

Describe the muscle involvement of RA

A

rheumatoid myositis- muscle weakness, necrosis, and atrophy

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15
Q

The primary treatment of RA is

A

dependent on the severity of symptoms

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16
Q

For mild to moderate RA symptoms the treatment is

A

joint immobilization, rest, corticosteroids, NSAIDs

17
Q

For severe RA symptoms the treatment is

A

surgical intervention

18
Q

The classes of drugs used to treat RA include

A

DMARDS- disease modifying antirheumatic drugs which work to decrease the body’s immune or inflammatory properties
Non-biologic- such as methotrexate (cornerstone of tx)
Biologic- TNF inhibitors, interleukin 1 receptor agonists, anti CD 20 monoclonal antibody

19
Q

The anesthetic considerations for RA include

A

Medications
Airway
Positioning
& spinal anesthesia

20
Q

The spinal anesthesia considerations for RA include

A

sensory, CSF is decreased so reduce dose d/t higher spread

21
Q

The positioning anesthesia considerations for RA include

A

padding

22
Q

The medication considerations for RA include

A

NSAIDs- platelet dysfunction, renal & liver damage

corticosteroids- HPA axis suppression–> may need steroid supplementation

23
Q

The airway considerations for RA include

A

TMJ can limit mouth opening
cervical spine- have inline stabilization
cricoarytenoid joint- may need smaller ETT