Rheum Lecture Flashcards

1
Q

Systemic
Polyarthritis
Oligoarthritis
Enthesitis-related
Psoriatic

A

Subtypes of Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis

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2
Q

NSAIDs
Corticosteroids
Methotrexate, Hydroxychloroquine, Sulfasalazine
Etanercept, Infliximab

A

Tx options for juvenile RA

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3
Q

Need 2 of the 4 for a diagnosis:

Purpura
Bowel angina
Biopsy
Peds group

A

Henoch Sholien Purpura

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4
Q

Criteria for dx:

Fever
plus 4 or 5 of:

Conjunctivitis
Mucus membrane
Extremities
Rash
Adenopathy

A

Kawasaki Disease

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5
Q

Malar rash
Photosensitivity
Discoid lupus
Renal signs
Raynauds
Mucosal sores
Lymphadenopathy

A

SLE

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6
Q

Tx:
Corticosteroids
NSAIDs
Hydroxychloroquine
Cyclophosphamide
Counseling

A

Tx for SLE

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7
Q

ANA

DS DNA

Complement

..used for the dx of?

A

SLE

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8
Q

Females > males
onset either 2-5 or 10-14 (bimodal age distribution)

Usually starts with 1-2 joints
Spreads to about 5 joints within 6 months

  • *symmetric joint involvement** (knees, wrists, ankles)
  • *dactylitis, uveitis**

Dx: must have arthritis in 4 or more joints within 6 months and rule out other causes

A

Polyarhritis juvenile arthritis

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9
Q

arthritis and enthesitis, or arthritis and 2 of:
-SI joint tenderness
-inflammatory spinal pain
-HLA B27
-Fam hx of anterior uveitis with pain,
spondyloarthropathy, or IBD
-Anterior uveitis with pain, redness or
photophobia

A

Ethesitis-related juvenile arthritis

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10
Q

Which NSAID should be avoided in kids?

A

Aspirin!

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11
Q

Girls preschool age (rare under age 1)

Arthritis in less than 5 joints. Maybe single joint (knee, ankle, wrist, hands)

DIP arthritis= highly indicative

Psoriatic so will see associated soft plaque rash

Skin and nails (pitting of nails)

Onchyolysis (nails separate from nailbed)

Uveitis

A

Psoriatic juvenile arthritis

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12
Q

Presentation can be articular or extraarticular
Usually wrists, knees, ankles (but can be others)

Fevers! Quotidian fever..high intermittent fevers almost daily

Rash associated with heat/fever (often axilla, waist)
-can elicit rash if you rub the skin (bc of warmth)

Hepatosplenomegaly, lymphadenopathy
VERY high WBC!
Thrombocytosis (high platelets)
Anemia

Complications= joint destruction. can affect growth, may have early replacement surgery, fusions, etc.

A

Systemic juvenile arthritis

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13
Q

Can be extended or persistent
Limp without pain
No systemic signs
Affects larger joints

Joints may be swollen, tender on exam (no erythema)

A

Oligoarthritis

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14
Q

Small/medium artery involvement
aneurysm formation

High fevers!!
Conjunctivitis, rash, strawberry tongue, dry cracked mucosa, cervical LAD
Tachycardic, SOB, CHF symptoms
Skin on fingers and toes “slough”

High risk of sudden death! Coronary artery anuerysm

A

Kawaski disease

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15
Q

Tx for Kawasaki Disease?

A

IV Ig (can also give Aspirin)

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