The Science of Rheumatoid Arthritis Flashcards

1
Q

The two ends of bones coming together to make a joint are lined with what?

A

Articular cartilage

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2
Q

Functions of synovium?

A

Lubrication of cartilage
Control of synovial fluid volume
Nutrition of chondrocytes within joints
Maintenance of intact tissue surface

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3
Q

How does the synovium link to rheumatoid arthritis?

A

Synovitis is hallmark of rheumatoid arthritis

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4
Q

Cells in lining of synovium?

A

Macrophages
Fibroblasts- maintenance of lubrication

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5
Q

What happens to a joint affected by rheumatoid arthritis?

A

Thickening of synovium due to inflammation aka synovitis

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6
Q

What effect does synovitis have on bone and cartilage?

A

Causes erosion

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7
Q

Rheumatoid arthritis?

A

Chronic symmetric polyarticular inflammatory joint disease

(say that five times fast)

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8
Q

In rheumatoid arthritis, what is the synovitis characterised by?

A

Inflammatory cell infiltration, fibroblast proliferation and neoangiogenesis

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9
Q

Rheumatoid arthritis is an autoimmune disease.
What can be associated with rheumatoid arthritis?

A

Autoantibodies e.g. rheumatoid factor and anti-citrullinated protein antibodies

->these autoantibodies can contribute to inflammation

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10
Q

Which autoantibodies are usually checked for?

A

ACP antibodies- more specific
Rheumatoid factor

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11
Q

What does rheumatoid factor recognise of self?

A

IgG

->so recognises it as mot being part of ourselves I think so tries to destroy

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12
Q

Genetics play a part in the pathogenesis of rheumatoid arthritis, what are some of the environmental factors
?

A

Smoking
Infectious agents e.g. E.Coli

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13
Q

What process occurs in the ACP antibodies response in rheumatoid arthritis?

A

Citrullination

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14
Q

What happens in citrullination?

A

Conversion of arginine (amino acid) into citrulline (another amino acid)

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15
Q

What enzyme is responsible for the conversion of arginine into citrulline?

A

Peptidylarginine deiminases (PADs)

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16
Q

What is the pathological hallmark of RA>

A

Synovitis

17
Q

What is synovitis characterised by?

A

Intima hyperplasia with infiltration of mononuclear cells e.g. CD4+ T cells, macrophages and B cells

18
Q

Describe what happens in synovitis.

A

Villous hypertrophy
Infiltration of T cells, B cells and macrophages
Intimal cell proliferation
Production of cytokines and proteases
Increases vascularity

19
Q

What do inflammatory cytokines activate?

A

Synovial fibroblasts
Chondrocytes
Osteoclasts

20
Q

Neoangiogenesis?

A

Production of new blood vessels

->occurs in synovitis as provides nutrients to hyperplastic synovium

21
Q

What does the destruction of cartilage and bone cause?

A

Joint space narrowing and erosions

22
Q

Which cells mediate bone destruction?

A

Osteoclasts

23
Q

What are the key cytokines in chronic inflammatory arthirits?

A

TNF-alpha
IL-1
IL-6
RANK-ligand
IL-17

24
Q

Systemic consequences of rheumatoid arthritis?

A

CVD
Fatigue
Liver
Lungs
Muscles- sarcopenia
Bone- osteoporosis
Secondary Sjogren’s syndrome

25
Q
A