Musculoskeletal, Skin, and Connective Tissue- Phatology (2) Flashcards

1
Q

Systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis

  • Ocurrs in
  • Presentation
  • Labs
  • Treatment
A

In < 12 year olds.

Presents with daily spiking fevers, salmon-pink macular rash, uveitis, and arthritis (commonly 2+ joints).

Labs: leukocytosis, thrombocytosis, anemia, ESR, CRP.

Treatment: NSAIDs, steroids, methotrexate, TNF inhibitors

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2
Q

Sjögren syndrome

  • Ocurrs in
  • Findings
A

women 40–60 years old

Findings:
ƒƒ Inflammatory joint pain
ƒƒ Keratoconjunctivitis sicca 
ƒƒ Xerostomia 
ƒƒ Presence of antinuclear antibodies, rheumatoid factor, SS-A (anti-Ro) and/or SS-B (anti- La)
ƒƒ Bilateral parotid enlargement
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3
Q

Septic arthritis

  • Etiology
  • Presentation
A

S aureus, Streptococcus, and Neisseria gonorrhoeae are common causes.

Affected joint is swollen, red, and painful. Synovial fluid purulent (WBC > 50,000/mm3).

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4
Q

Gonococcal arthritis

A

STI that presents as either purulent arthritis (eg, knee) or triad of polyarthralgia, tenosynovitis (eg, hand), dermatitis (eg, pustules).

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5
Q

Seronegative spondyloarthritis

  • HLA
  • Types
  • Clinical features
A

Strong association with HLA-B27.

Subtypes (PAIR): psoriatic arthritis, Ankylosing sponndilitis, IBD, Reactive athritis

share variable occurrence of inflammatory back pain, peripheral arthritis, enthesitis, dactylitis, uveitis.

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6
Q

Psoriatic arthritis

A

Associated with skin psoriasis and nail lesions. Asymmetric and patchy involvement. Dactylitis and “pencil-in-cup” deformity of DIP on x-ray

Fewer than 1 ⁄3 of patients with psoriasis.

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7
Q

Ankylosing spondylitis

A

Symmetric involvement of spine and sacroiliac joints Ž ankylosis (joint fusion), uveitis, aortic regurgitation. Bamboo spine (vertebral fusion).

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8
Q

Reactive arthritis

A
Formerly known as Reiter syndrome. 
Classic triad:
ƒƒConjunctivitis
ƒƒUrethritis
ƒƒ Arthritis

Shigella, Yersinia, Chlamydia, Campylobacter, Salmonella

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9
Q

SLE criteria

A

RASH OR PAIN:
Rash (malar or discoid)
Arthritis (nonerosive)
Serositis (eg, pleuritis, pericarditis)
Hematologic disorders (eg, cytopenias)
Oral/nasopharyngeal ulcers (usually painless)
Renal disease
Photosensitivity
Antinuclear antibodies
Immunologic disorder (anti-dsDNA, anti-Sm, antiphospholipid)
Neurologic disorders (eg, seizures, psychosis)

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10
Q

Antiphospholipid syndrome criteria

A

Diagnose based on clinical criteria:

  • history of thrombosis (arterial or venous)
  • spontaneous abortion along

laboratory findings:

  • lupus anticoagulant
  • anticardiolipin
  • anti-β2 glycoprotein antibodies.
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11
Q

Mixed connective tissue disease

A

Features of SLE, systemic sclerosis, and/or polymyositis.

Associated with anti-U1 RNP antibodies (speckled ANA).

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12
Q

Polymyalgia rheumatica

  • Clinical features
  • Epidemiology
  • Labs
  • Treatment
A

Pain and stiffness in proximal muscles, often with fever, malaise, weight loss. Does not cause muscular weakness.

More common in women > 50 years old; associated with giant cell (temporal) arteritis.

High ESR, high CRP, normal CK.

Rapid response to low-dose corticosteroids

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13
Q

Fibromyalgia

  • Occurs in
  • Clinical features
  • Treatment
A

Women 20–50 years old.

Chronic, widespread musculoskeletal pain associated with “tender points,” stiffness, paresthesias, poor sleep, fatigue, cognitive disturbance.

Treatment: regular exercise, antidepressants (TCAs, SNRIs), neuropathic pain agents

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14
Q

Polymyositis/dermatomyositis

  • Antibodies
  • Treatment
A

High CK, ⊕ ANA (nonspecific), ⊕ anti-Jo-1 (histidyl tRNA synthetase) (specific), ⊕ anti-SRP (specific),
⊕ anti-Mi-2 (specific) antibodies.

Both disorders associated with interstitial lung disease.

Treatment: steroids followed by long-term immunosuppressant therapy (eg, methotrexate).

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15
Q

Polymyositis

A

symmetric proximal muscle weakness, characterized by endomysial inflammation with CD8+ T cells. Most often involves shoulders.

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16
Q

Dermatomyositis

A

Similar to polymyositis, but also involves malar rash, Gottron papules, heliotrope rash, “shawl and face” rash, darkening and thickening of fingertips and sides resulting in irregular, “dirty”-appearing marks. risk of occult malignancy.

Perimysial inflammation and atrophy with CD4+ T cells.

17
Q

Myasthenia gravis

  • Phatophysiology
  • Clinical features
  • Association
A

Autoantibodies to postsynaptic ACh receptor

Ptosis, diplopia, weakness. Worsens with muscle use

Thymoma, thymic hyperplasia

*Improvement after edrophonium (tensilon) test

18
Q

Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome

  • Phatophysiology
  • Clinical features
  • Association
A

Autoantibodies to presynaptic Ca2+ channel

Proximal muscle weakness, autonomic symptoms.
Improves with muscle use

Small cell lung cancer

19
Q

Raynaud phenomenon

A

Raynaud disease when 1° (idiopathic),

Raynaud syndrome when 2° to a disease process

20
Q

Scleroderma (systemic sclerosis)

  • Physiophatology
  • Clinical features
A

Triad of autoimmunity, noninflammatory vasculopathy, and collagen deposition with fibrosis. 75% female

Commonly sclerosis of skin, manifesting as puffy, taut skin without wrinkles, fingertip pitting. Can involve other systems, eg, renal, pulmonary, GI, cardiovascular.

21
Q

Diffuse scleroderma

A

widespread skin involvement, rapid progression, early visceral involvement.

Associated with anti-Scl-70 antibody (anti-DNA topoisomerase I antibody).

22
Q

Limited scleroderma

A

Limited skin involvement confined to fingers and face.

CREST syndrome: Calcinosis cutis, anti-Centromere antibody, Raynaud phenomenon, Esophageal dysmotility, Sclerodactyly, and Telangiectasia.