Musculoskeletal Flashcards

1
Q

What is a general description of Rheumatoid arthritis?

A

Chronic inflammatory symmetrical polyarthropathy

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2
Q

What is a general description of Osteo Arthritis?

A

Degenerative arthropathy due to wear and tear

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3
Q

What is a general description of Gout?

A

Crystal arthropathy arising from increased production / intake or insufficient excretion of purines.

Crystals deposit in joints causing inflammation

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4
Q

What are the relevant path and histology findings for Rheumatoid arthritis?

A

Synovitis and tendosynovitis
Pannus formation (hyperplastic synovium)
Fibrous ankylosis
Bony ankylosis

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5
Q

What are the relevant path and histology findings for Osteo arthritis?

A

Articular cartilage damage, fragmentation and erosion

X-RAY (LOSS) - loss of joint space, osteophytes, subchondral cysts, subchondral sclerosis

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6
Q

What are the relevant path and histology findings for Gout?

A

Foreign body granuloma.
Clusters of negatively birefringent crystals
Macrophages and multinucleated giant cells

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7
Q

What sites are typically involved or spared in Rheumatoid arthritis?

A

Affected: MCP, PIP, MTP, Elbow (painful fixed flexion), shoulder, knee, hip, cervical spine (atlanto-axial subluxation)

Spared: DIPs and thoracolumbar

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8
Q

What sites are typically involved or spared in Osteo arthritis?

A

Affected: Large weight bearing joints (hips, knees), CMC, PIP, DIP

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9
Q

What sites are typically involved or spared in Gout?

A

Affected: Feet (first metacarpal - podagra) and ankle are common, but can be any joint

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10
Q

What are the main risk factors for Rheumatoid arthritis?

A

HLA-DR4, Female gender, FHx, smoking

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11
Q

What are the main risk factors for Osteo arthritis?

A

Overuse, obesity, >50yo

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12
Q

What are the main risk factors for Gout?

A

Male gender, diuretics, high purine diet, metabolic syndrome, CKD, tumour lysis syndrome

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13
Q

What is the typical history for Rheumatoid Arthritis?

A

Inflammatory symptoms, bogginess, decreased function (opening jars, using keys)

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14
Q

What is the typical history for Osteo arthritis?

A
Morning stiffness <30 mins
Worse with activity
Loss of movement
Instability
Crepitus
Knees locking or giving way
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15
Q

What is the typical history for Gout

A

Acute: Severe pain, oedema, erythema, often follows a trigger (alcohol)

Chronic: Deformity, gouty tophi

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16
Q

What are the extra-articular manifestations of Rheumatoid arthritis?

A

Rheumatoid nodules, AMI, peri/endocarditis, LVF, fibrosis, Sjogren’s syndrome, uveitis, scleritis, GNs, Peripheral neuropathy

17
Q

What are the main complications of Gout?

A

Bone erosion

Urolithiasis

18
Q

What are the antibodies present in rheumatoid arthritis?

A

RF, Anti-CCP, ANA

19
Q

What are the chronic treatments for RA?

A

Corticosteroids
Methotrexate + Folic acid
Hydroxychloroquine

bDMARDS: Infliximab, retuximab

20
Q

What is the acute management of gout?

A
  1. NSAIDS
  2. Colchicine
  3. Corticosteroids
  4. IL 1 inhibitor
  5. Urate lowering drugs (don’t stop)
21
Q

What is the chronic management of gout?

A
  1. Xanthine oxidase inhibitor (alopurinol, febuxostat)
  2. Probenacid
  3. uriolytics