Osteoarthritis Flashcards

1
Q

What is the most common arthritis and the leading cause of pain and disability worldwide?

A
  • OA
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2
Q

What is OA?

A
  • progressive loss of articular cartilage
  • remodelling of the underlying bone
  • associated inflammation
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3
Q

What joints are commonly affected in OA?

A
  • knees
  • hips
  • small joints of hands
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4
Q

What is the pathogenesis of OA?

A
  1. degradation of cartilage & remodelling of bone due to active response of chondrocytes and inflammatory cells
  2. Release of enzymes breakdown collagen and proteoglycans > destroy articular cartilage
  3. Exposure of subchondral bone > sclerosis
  4. Reactive remodelling > osteophyte formation & bone cyst
  5. Joint space progressively lost over time
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5
Q

What are the RF for OA?

A
  • hereditary
  • ageing
  • female
  • obesity
  • high bone density - RF for development of OA
  • low bone density - RF for progression of OA
  • joint injury
  • reduced muscle strength
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6
Q

How would you clinically diagnose OA?

A
  • Is aged 45 years or over; and
  • Has activity-related joint pain; and
  • Has either no morning joint-related stiffness or morning stiffness that lasts no longer than 30 minutes.
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7
Q

What are the sx for OA?

A
  • Joint pain that is exacerbated by exercise and relieved by rest.
  • Joint stiffness in the morning or after rest.
  • Reduced function and participation restriction
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8
Q

What are the signs of OA?

A
  • Reduced range of joint movement.
  • Pain on movement of the joint
  • Joint swelling/synovitis (warmth, effusion, synovial thickening).
  • Periarticular tenderness.
  • Crepitus.
  • Absence of systemic features such as fever or rash.
  • Heberden’s nodes or Bouchard’s nodes
  • Joint instability
  • muscle weakness around joint
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9
Q
A
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10
Q

What are the differentials for OA?

A
  • knee
    • prepatellar bursitis
    • referred hip pain
    • meniscal/ligament tear
    • chondromalacia patellae
  • hip
    • trochanteric bursitis
    • referred pain from knee
    • radiculopathy
    • iliotibial band syndrome
  • hand
    • de quervain’s tenosynovitis
    • RA
    • gout
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11
Q

What Ix would you perform for OA?

A
  • xray of joint (LOSS)
  • BMI

exclude other causes

  • Blood test
  • Joint aspiration
  • MRI
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12
Q

How would you mx OA?

A

Conservative

  • Exercise
  • Weight loss
  • Thermotherapy
  • Appropriate footwear advice
  • bracing, assistive device
  • Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation (TENS)

Medication

  • Paracetamol + NSAID
  • Intra-articular corticosteroid injection

Surgery

  • osteotomy
  • arthrodesis
  • arthroplasty
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13
Q

How to prevent OA?

A
  • Weight control.
  • Increasing physical activity.
  • Avoiding injury.
  • Improving education about OA
  • Optimal management of symptoms by GPs
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