Gout Flashcards

1
Q

Pathogenesis

A

deposition of urate crystals within a joint usually a result of hyperuricaemia = high serum uric acid uric acid is the final compound in the breakdown of purines in DNA metabolism (A&G) uric acid crystals precipitate in joints - triggered by dehydration, trauma, surgery

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2
Q

what causes hyperuricaemia?

A

(high serum uric acid = hyperuricaemia)renal excretion (can be exacerbated by diuretics/renal failure)excessive alcohol intake excessive red meat excessive seafood

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3
Q

who gets it?

A

there is some evidence of predisposition for gout

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4
Q

how does it present?

A

1st MTP joint is classic site - Podagra ankle and knee also common intensely painful, red, hot swollen joint - mimic septic arthritis 7-10 days if untreated to resolvegouty tophi chronic gout - destructive erosive arthritis

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5
Q

what are gouty tophi?

A

painless white accumulations of uric acid in soft tissues occasionally erupt through the skin

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6
Q

how is it investigated?

A

sample of synovial fluid analysed with gram stain and culture to exclude infection polarised microscopy - needle shaped uric acid crystals - -ve birefringence (change from yellow to blue when lined across the direction of polarization)

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7
Q

how is it managed?

A

acute attacks - NSAIDs (colchaine for patients who can’t tolerate NSAIDs)- corticosteroids - opioid analgesics recurrent attacks/ joint destruction/ tophi - allopurinol or other urate lowering therapies once the acute attack has settled (they can potentiate a further flare)

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