Polymyalgia Rheumatica Flashcards

1
Q

Definition of PMR

A

A common inflammatory rheumatic disease of the middle aged and elderly
Characterised by pain and stiffness of the neck, proximal shoulder and hip girdle muscles

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2
Q

Constitutional signs of PMR

A
fever 
fatigue
anorexia
weight loss
depression
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3
Q

What is relevance of steroids in PMR?

A

Clinical response to small doses off steroid can be dramatic and therefore diagnostic

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4
Q

Clinical features of PMR

A

Musculoskeletal symptoms bilateral / symmetrical
Muscle stiffness predominant
Stiffness severe after rest and on waking
Patients often unable to rise out of bed or dress
Muscle pain often diffuse, worse on movement
Pain at night common
Muscles tender
Muscle strength normal
Patients unable to raise arms above head
Mild arthritis of wrists, hands, knees and feet
Elevation of ESR and CRP
Normochromic, normocytic anaemia

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5
Q

What are the constitutional signs of PMR

A
WAFFeD:
Weight loss 
Anorexia 
Fatigue 
Fever 
Depression
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6
Q

What is the British Society for Rheumatology Core inclusion diagnostic criteria?

A

Age >50 years
Duration >2 weeks
Bilateral shoulder or pelvic girdle pain or both
Morning stiffness duration >45mins
Acute phase response (ESR and CRP) elevated

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7
Q

What are the BSR exclusion criteria?

A
Active infection
Active cancer 
Active GCA 
Other inflammatory diseases e.g. RA
Polymyositis
Drug induced myalgia e.g. statins 
Chronic pain syndromes e.g. fibromyalgia
Adhesive capsulitis - frozen shoulder  
Endocrine disease e.g. hypothyroidism
Neurological conditions e.g. Parkinson's
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8
Q

What are the investigations that need to be carried out?

A
Full blood count - normochromic normocytic anaemia
C-reactive protein - raised --> CRP is a better marker of inflammation than ESR 
Erythrocyte sedimentation rate - raised
Urea and electrolytes - normal
Liver function tests ALT - normal
Bone profile - alk phos raised
Serum free light chains - no paraprotein
Immunoglobulins - normal
TSH/ Creatine kinase - normal
ANA / anti-CCP antibodies - negative
CXR - normal
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9
Q

What is the treatment of PMR?

A

Low dose prednisolone 15mg/ day
If there is no dramatic improvement in symptoms then review diagnosis
Be guided by clinical symptoms
Taper the corticosteroid dose gradually

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10
Q

What else is important to remember when prescribing treatment for PMR?

A

Co-prescribe bone protection - bisphosphonate, calcium and vitamin D

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11
Q

How soon should follow up be?

A

Follow up week 0, 1-3, 6 weeks

and then 3, 6, 9, 12 months in first year

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12
Q

What are some atypical features which suggest that PMR is not the diagnosis?

A
No improvement/no response to steroid 
Age <50-60 years 
Chronic onset >2 months 
Lack of shoulder involvement 
Lack of inflammatory stiffness 
Prominent systemic features 
Weight loss
Night pain
Neurological symptoms 
Features of other rheumatic disease 
Normal or extremely high acute-phase response
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