The seronegative spondylarthropathies Flashcards

1
Q

give egs of the seronegative spondylarthropathies

A
ankylosing spondylitis
psoriatic arthritis
reactive arthritis (sexually acquired, Reiters disease)
post-dysenteric reactive arthritis
enteropathic arthritis
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2
Q

clinical features shared by the seronegative spondylarthropathies

A
  • axial (spinal & sacroiliac) inflammation
  • asymmetrical peripheral arthritis
  • absence of rheumatoid factor, hence ‘seronegative’
  • inflammation of enthesis (the connective tissue between tendon or ligament and bone)
  • a strong association with HLA-B27
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3
Q

ankylosing spondylitis

A

inflammatory disorder of the spine

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4
Q

who does ankylosing spondylitis affect?

A

mainly young adults

more common and more severe in men

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5
Q

ankylosing spondylitis presents w

A

presents w inc pain and prolonged morning stiffness in lower back and buttocks

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6
Q

ankylosing spondylitis clinical features

A

pain and stiffness improves with exercise
progressive loss of spinal movement
achilles tendonitis
tenderness around the pelvis and chest wall

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7
Q

investigations ankylosing spondylitis

A

ESR CRP raised
Xray = normal or erosion / sclerosis of margins of sacroiliac joints

Blurring of upper/lower vertebral rims at thoracolumbar junction caused by enthesitis at the insertion of the intervertebral ligaments. This heals with new bone formation = bony growths inside the ligament called syndesmophytes = bamboo spine - sacroiliac joints fuse

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8
Q

management ankylosing spondylitis

A

early diagnosis and rx = essential to prevent syndesmorphytes and calcification
morning exercises
slow release NSAIDs taken at night
tnf-a blocking drugs

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9
Q

psoriatic arthritis

A

arthritis occurs in 20% of pts w psoriasis

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10
Q

clinical features psoriatic arthritis

A
  • asymmetrical involvement of the small joints of the hand incl DIPJ
  • symmetrical seronegative polyarthritis resembling RA
  • arthritis mutilans = destruction of the small bones in hands and feet
  • sacroilitis unilateral or bilateral
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11
Q

investigations psoriatic arthritis

A

blood tests unhelpful
xrays = pencil in a cup deformity in IPJs - bone erosions create a pointed appearance & the articulating bone is concave

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12
Q

rx psoriatic arthritis

A
  • analgesia and NSAIDs
  • local synovitis responds to intra-articular steroid injections
  • methotrexate or TNF blocking drugs in severe disease
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13
Q

reactive arthritis what is it and when does it occur

A

reactive arthritis is a sterile synovitis, occurs following:

  • GI infection
  • STI, urethritis in M or cervicitis in F from chlamydia trachomatis

persistent bacterial antigen in the inflamed synovium of affected joints drives the inflam process

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14
Q

clin features reactive arthritis

A

typical case = young man w acute arthritis after enteric or STI
asymmetrical lower joint arthritis
skin lesions resemble psoriasis
classic triad of Reiter’s syndrome: urethritis, reactive arthritis and conjunctivitis

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15
Q

investigations reactive arthritis

A

diagnosis is clinical
ESR raised at acute stage
aspirated synovial fluid is sterile w high neutrophil count

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16
Q

management reactive arthritis

A
  • NSAIDs and local corticosteroid injections
  • persistent infec = antibiotics
  • relapsing cases are treated w sulfasalazine (DMARD) or methotrexate & TNF blocking drugs in severe cases
17
Q

enteropathic arthritis

A

large joint asymmetrical
10-15% of pts w ulcerative colitis or crohn’s
parallels the activity of the inflam bowel disease so improves as bowel symps improve