Gouty Arthritis Flashcards

1
Q

What is gout?

A

a metabolic disease of a heterogeneous nature, often familial, associated with abnormal amounts of urates in the body and characterized early by a recurring acute arthritis, usually monoarticular, and later by chronic deforming arthritis.

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2
Q

Associated hyperuricemia (serum uric acid > 6.8) is due to what?

A

An overproduction or underexcretion of uric acid

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3
Q

Gout is most common in what type of population?

A

Pacific Islanders (Filipinos and Samoans)

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4
Q

What are the 2 types of gout?

A
  • primary

- secondary

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5
Q

What is primary gout linked to?

A

Several genes, making it hereditary

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6
Q

What is secondary gout linked to?

A

Acquired causes of hyperuricemia, such as medications, myeloproliferative disorders, multiple myeloma, hypothyroidism, etc.

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7
Q

Ingestion of what promotes hyperuricemia?

A

alcohol

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8
Q

What type of patients often suffer attacks of gout? Why?

A

Hospitalized patients, because of changes in diet, fluid intake, or medications

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9
Q

About __% of patients with primary gout are men

A

90

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10
Q

When does gout onset typically occur in women?

A

postmenopausal

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11
Q

What is the characteristic nodular deposition of monosodium urate monohydrate crystals with an associated foreign body reaction called?

A

the tophus

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12
Q

What is acute inflammation of gout believed to be initiated by?

A

the ingestion of uncoated urate crystals by monocytes and synoviocytes

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13
Q

What are important factors in precipitating acute gout?

A

Rapid fluctuations in serum urate levels, either increasing or decreasing

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14
Q

What is characteristic of chronic stage gout?

A

Tophaceous invasion of the surrounding tissue, with structural derangement and secondary degeneration (OA)

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15
Q

Uric acid kidney stones are present in -% of patients with gouty arthritis

A

5-10

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16
Q

What causes chronic urate nephropathy?

A

the deposition of monosodium urate crystals in the renal medulla and pyramids

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17
Q

What are the signs and symptoms of acute gouty arthritis?

A
  • Sudden in onset
  • Nocturnal
  • More than one joint may be involved
  • Involved joints are swollen and exquisitely tender
  • Fever
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18
Q

Which joint is the most susceptible to gouty arthritis?

A

MTP joint of the great toe (“podagra”)

19
Q

Where can tophi be found?

A
  • external ears
  • feet
  • olecranon
  • prepatellar bursa
  • hands
20
Q

Gout can evolve into chronic polyarthritis of upper and lower extremities that mimics what disease?

A

rheumatoid arthritis

21
Q

A single uric acid determination during an acute flare of gout is normal in up to __% of patients. Therefore a normal serum uric acid level does not exclude gout.

A

25

22
Q

Sodium urate crystals in joint fluid or material aspirated from a tophus are ____ shaped and _____ bifringent.

A

needle

negative

23
Q

What are the differential diagnoses associated with acute gout?

A
  • Cellulitis
  • Pyogenic arthritis
  • Pseudogout
24
Q

What is the differential diagnosis associated with chronic gout?

A

Chronic rheumatoid arthritis

25
Q

How should asymptomatic hyperuricemia be treated?

A

it should not be treated

26
Q

How should an acute attack of gouty arthritis be treated?

A
  • NSAIDS (Indomethacin and Naproxen)
  • Colchicine
  • Corticosteroids
  • Interleukin-1 inhibitors
27
Q

What is the goal of treatment between gouty arthritis attacks?

A

Minimize urate deposition in tissues, which causes chronic tophaceous arthritis, and to reduce the frequency and severity of recurrences

28
Q

What individuals are more likely to benefit from pharmacological treatment?

A
  • Mild chronic kidney disease
  • Multiple and frequent attacks of gout
  • Higher uric acid level
  • Tophaceous gout
29
Q

Patients should avoid ___-purine diets

A

high

30
Q

True or False

Thiazide and loop diuretics, niacin, and aspirin should be avoided in patients with gout

A

True

31
Q

What are the 2 indications for daily administration of colchicine?

A
  • For individuals with mild hyperuricemia and only occasional attacks of gout
  • When urate-lowering therapy is started
32
Q

What are the 3 indications for urate-lowering therapy?

A
  • frequent acute arthritis (two or more episodes per year)
  • tophaceous deposits
  • chronic kidney disease (stage 2 or worse)
33
Q

The goal of urate-lowering therapy is to maintain the serum uric acid at or below _ mg/dL

A

6

34
Q

What are the 3 classes of agents that can be used to lower the serum uric acid?

A
  • Xanthine oxidase inhibitors
  • Uricosuric agents
  • Uricase
35
Q

What are the 2 xanthine oxidase inhibitors?

A

Allopurinol and febuxostat

36
Q

How do allopurinol and febuxostat lower plasma uric acid levels?

A

By blocking the final enzymatic steps in the production of uric acid

37
Q

What is the most frequent adverse effect of allopurinol?

A

precipitation of an acute gouty attack

38
Q

What is the most frequent adverse effect of febuxostat?

A

abnormal liver tests

39
Q

How do uricosuric agents

lower plasma uric acid levels?

A

by blocking the tubular reabsorption of filtered urate, thereby increasing uric acid excretion by the kidney

40
Q

What is the uricosuric agent of choice in the US?

A

Probenecid

41
Q

What are the contraindications of Probenecid?

A
  • patients with a creatinine clearance < 50 mL/min
  • history of nephrolithiasis (uric acid or calcium stones)
  • overproduction of uric acid (>800 mg in 24 hours)
42
Q

What is the uricase enzyme that must be administered IV?

A

Pegloticase

43
Q

Why do hyperuricemia and gout tend to develop in transplant patients?

A

because they have decreased kidney function and require drugs that inhibit uric acid excretion