MSK conditions :howell Flashcards

1
Q

Juvenile idiopathic arthritis definition

A

chronic,systemic inflammatory condition that begins before age 16

begins in at least one joint for at least 6 weeks

on exam, defined as joint swelling or a combination of limited range of motion with pain in a joint

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2
Q

JIA incidence

(peak incidences)

A

more common in women (2:1)

2 peak incidence:
1. 1-3 years old
2. 8-12 years old

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3
Q

JIA 3 course patterns

A

highly variable

monophasic: active systemic, gone after 4-6 months with no recurrence

polycyclic: long periods of inactivity with active episodes (least common)

persistent (Chronic): variable forms (systemic sx wit no srthritis, both systemic and arthris sx, arthritis no systemic sx) most common

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4
Q

JIA labs

A

ESR:
systemic and polyarticular= increased
pauciarticular = normal

anemia= in chronic JIA

high WBC( as white cells entry sybovium they can cause decrease in serum especially in active dz)

(-) RF

ANA: in 33% of children with ocular complications in pauciarticular

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5
Q

JIA evaluation

A

soft tissue swelling
periarticular osteopenia
joint destruction (less frequent in children) erosions and cysts

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6
Q

JIA management

A

eye exams/ophto referral: every 3 months
(+) ANA in 33% of pauciarticular JRA out of this, 10% have chronic uveitis

(-) ANA monitor every 6 months: chance of developing chronic uvitis is diminished each year ANA(-)

at 5 years post-diagnosis monitoring is no longer cost effective

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7
Q

JIA complications

A

blindness: most serious for pauciarticular
joint deforminity: more common in polyarticular JRA
intermittent infections and potentially fatal amyloidosis for protractes systemic JRA
mortality overall is 2%

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8
Q

types of JIA , incidence and when is it determined

A

determined the first 6 months based on sx’s

systemic aka “still’s disease” (20%) , younger childen

Pauciarticular/oligoarticular (50%) most common

polyarticular (30%)

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9
Q

Systemic JRA aka still’s disease
diagnostic criteria

A

diagnostic criteria: fever at least 2 weeks in duration and quotidian= daily intervals where it spikes several times throught the day
must also have one of the following:

typical rash: linear pattern, salmon color, maculopapular, worse with fever and evenings , elicited by scratching (koebner’s phenomenon)

LAO,HSM

or serositis (pericarditis, pleuritis)

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10
Q

Systemic juvenile idiopathic arthirtis sx

A

systemic sx more pronounced than articular sx (within first 6 months)
maybe one joint with mild inflammation

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11
Q

Systemic juvenile idiopathic arthirtis labs

A

mild anemia
elevated: ESR,CRP
Negative: ANA and RF

infectious workout: blood cultures, urine, joint tapping all negative

malignancy workup

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12
Q

Pauciarticular/oligoarticular JRA onset and prognosis

A

onset:2-3 yrs old
good prognosis

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13
Q

Pauciarticular/oligoarticular JRA sx

A

swelling, pain, and stiffness in 2-4 joints

larger joints: knees (very common), elbows, ankles : limping when walking

systemic sx minimal: spiking fevers are not common

eye involvement: higher risk than other JRA
chronic iriidocyclitis manifestation of anterior uveitis
risk of perm vision loss

leg length discrepency of affected leg
before pubertery: leg longer due to synovial thickening
after: leg shorter bc hrowth pltes stop sooner

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14
Q

pauciarticular/oligoarticular subgroups

A

persistent: no additional joint involvement after the first 6 months

extended: involvement of additional joints after first 6 months

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15
Q

Polyarticular JRA sx

A

more likely to persist to adulthood
5 or more joints involved: swelling, pain and stiffness

resembles adult RA: symmetric pattern

C-spine involvement common: decreased ROM and pain in the neck

may have systemic features but less severe than systemic JRA

micrognathia: early closure of ossification centers of the mandible, marked receding of chin, characteristic of polyarticular jra

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16
Q

HSP(Henoch-schonlein purpura definition and peak age

A

a vasculitic syndrome
inflmmation of small blood vessels

peak age: 4-7 years old

17
Q

HSP triad

A

purpura
colicky(abd pain, cramping that comes and goes)
migratory arthritis

18
Q

HSP complications

A

renal disease: hematuria/proteinuria

rare condition but urine analysis is needed to rule this out

19
Q

Rheumatic fever etiology

A

multisystemic inflammatory disease after strep throat group a strep, B hemolytic step pyogenes

20
Q

rheumatic fever incidence

A

ages 5-15 y/o for first attack
possible relapses later

21
Q

rheumatic fever rash

A

erythema marginatum

serpiginous rash
evanescent: worse w/fever
well demarcated spreading to trunk and proximal extremeties
not specific
lasts a day or so

22
Q

jones criteria major and minor

A

one major and 2 minor or 2 major and evidence of strep pharyngitis

Major criteria:
migratory polyarthritis (70%)
carditis (40-50%)
chorea (Syndenhams)
erythema marginatum
subcutaneous nodules: extensor surfaces on

minor:
(+) thorat culture or rising ASO titer
fever
arthalgia
increased acute phase reactant
CRP and ESR elevated
Prolonged PR interval on EKG

23
Q

Evaluation of rheumatic fever

A

throat culture
ASO titer
chest x-ray
echo
note: valvular defects and mitral valve leaflet prolapse may show up later in life

24
Q

Rheumatoid arthritis etiology

A

unknown. perhaps autoimmune or infectious agent

25
Q

Rheumatoid arthritis incidence

A

peak ages: 35-45 years old

prevalence increases with age
3x more common in females
genetics: association with HLA DR4 “dang RA”

twin to twin concordance:15-20%

26
Q

rheumatoid arthitis onset types

A

70% insidious in onset
20% subacute
10 % explosive or acute

27
Q

RA inflammation process

A

edema leads to neovascularization
synovial linig thickers (hyperplasia)
erosion occurs at the joint margins
inflmmation leads to seroous effusion
effucion stretches the joint capsule
the joint becomes unstable
deformities form

28
Q

RA sx

A

fatigue. malaise, wt loss
symmetrical
small and proximal joints 1st: MCPs, PIPs, wrist, MTPs : larger joints later

better with activity

29
Q

common RA hand deformities

A

fusiform swelling: 1st sign
PIP swelling (synovitis)
sausage finger or spindle shaped

Boutonniere deforminty: flexion of PIP joints and extension at DIP joint

Swan neck: flexion at MCP joint, extension at PIP, flexion at DIP joint

ulnar deviation of fingers

subluxation of the MCP

30
Q

RA extra-articular manifestations

A

tendonitis and tendon ruptures
pulmonary
peripheral nerve compression: carpal tunnel
rheumatoid nodules: strongly associated with positive RF

splenomegaly
pericarditis
vacultiis
eye involvement: scleritis, dry eyes, epi-scleritis: inflmm of thin membrane between the sclera and conjuctiva

31
Q

RA labs

A

supportive but not diagnostic

positive RF in 70-80% of pts
evelated CRP and ESR
mild anemia of chronic dz
high WBC count : 60% are neurtophils
synovial analysis: arthrocentesis shows fluid is cloudy, sterile, decreased viscosity, no crystals

32
Q

X ray findings RA

A

Soft tissue swelling
periarticualr osteopenia: bone loss near the joint
joint space narrowing
erosion
deformity

33
Q

RA diagnostic criteria

A

all of the following are present

inflmmatory arthritis in 3 or more joints
+RF and/or anti-CRP aka ACPA
elevated ESR or CRP
sx for longer than 6 weeks
excluding other causes

34
Q

dx for patients not meeting criterai

A

seronegative RA (lack both RF and ACPAS)
Based upon findings otherwise characteristic of RA if appropriate exclusions have been met
recent onset of ra
To avoid delays in initiation of treatment for pts with severe disease presentation

35
Q

increased mortality in RA

A

shortens life span by 5-10 years
cardiovascular complications
infections: 5x higher risk than general population
cancer and lymphoproliferative malgnancies : 5-8x higher risk of lymphoma

other clinical problems:
sjogren’s
osteoporosis
laryngeal manifestation
ossicles of the ear: tinnitus and decresead hearing

36
Q

RA management

A

early diagnosis and treatment necesary to prevent damge

no weight bearing exercising
poool therapy exercise

nsaids for sx releif
DMARDs: disease modifying anti-rheumatic drugs
assignment by rheumatoligst
methotrexate (MTX), gold, cyclosporin,immunran
hydrochloroquine : anti malaria drug, safer

37
Q

Felty syndrome

A

1-3% of RA
very high RF
RA in combination with splenomegaly, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia
HLA DR4+

usually occurs after many years of aggressive RA

pulmonary and skin infections common

38
Q
A