🩻MSK🩻 - Inflammatory & Rheumatoid Arthritis Flashcards

(111 cards)

1
Q

What are the 2 types of arthritis?

A

Osteoarthritis (degenerative arthritis)
Inflammatory arthritis

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2
Q

What are the signs of joint inflammation?

A

Red
Hot/warm
Swelling/fluid

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3
Q

What are the causes of joint inflammation?

A

Infection - septic arthritis, TB
Crystal arthritis - gout, pseudogout
Autoimmune

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4
Q

Which causes of joint inflammation fall into which category of inflammation?

A

Infection + crystal arthritis - secondary inflammation
Immune-mediated (autoimmune) - primary

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5
Q

Which causes of joint inflammation are sterile and which are not?

A

Crystal + autoimmune - sterile
Infection - non-sterile

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6
Q

How is degenerative arthritis immediately distinguishable from inflammatory conditions upon investigation?

A

No inflammation (red, hot, swollen joint)
Slow speed of onset
Synovial fluid analysis - sterile, no inflammatory cells
Normal CRP
Normal WCC

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7
Q

What would you see in a synovial fluid analysis of the inflammatory causes of arthritis?

A

Autoimmune - inflammatory cells, sterile
Crystal - inflammatory cells, sterile, crystals
Septic - Inflammatory cells, bacteria

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8
Q

What are the expected CRP levels for the inflammatory arthritises?

A

Autoimmune - raised
Crystal - raised or significantly raised
Septic - significantly raised

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9
Q

Which is the only arthritis that causes an increased WCC?

A

Septic
(autoimmune and crystal arthritis can, but it is unusual)

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10
Q

What arthritis is an orthopaedic emergency?

A

Septic arthritis

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11
Q

What presentation (i.e. collection of symptoms) must always be treated as an emergency in arthritis?

A

Acute hot, swollen joint (i.e. anything suggestive of septic arthritis)
Treated as septic arthritis until proven otherwise

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12
Q

What investigation should be performed in the case of an acute red, hot, swollen joint?

A

Joint aspiration
Send fluid for gram stain and culture

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13
Q

What is the management for septic arthritis?

A

Joint washout (lavage) and IV Abx

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14
Q

What are the types of autoimmune arthritis?

A
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15
Q

What are the key history and examination points for arthritis?

A

Speed of onset/duration?
Worse or better with movement?
Prolonged morning/inactivity stiffness?
No of joints?
Size of joints?
Spinal involvement?
Pattern/symmetry?
Signs of inflammation (red, warm, swollen)

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16
Q

What is rheumatoid arthritis?

A

Chronic autoimmune disease
Primary site of pathology is the synovium - “synovitis” = inflammation of the synovial membrane

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17
Q

Where on the body does RA often manifest?

A
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18
Q

Outline RA in a clinical setting, including the epidemiology and key features

A

Common, Sex bias F:M 2:1
Age of onset usually 30-50s
Chronic, polyarthritis
Pain, swelling, early morning stiffness
May lead to joint damage and destruction - ‘joint erosions’ on radiographs
Systemic disease with extra-articular manifestations
Auto-antibodies usually detected in blood

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19
Q

What is the aetiology of RA?

A

Concordance in monozygotic vs dizygotic twines = 15%vs4% - mix of genes and environment
Female

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20
Q

What are some environmental factors for RA?

A

Smoking
Microbiome
Porphyromonas gingivalis
Poor oral health

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21
Q

How does smoking lead to RA?

A

RA and anti-citrullinated protein antibodies (ACPA)
Smoking -> citrullination of proteins in lung epithelium
P. gingivalis can also cause citrullination
(all the info we’re given on it lol)

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22
Q

What is the strongest genetic risk factor for RA?

A

HLA-DR

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23
Q

Explain the significance of HLA in RA

A

HLA,B,C (HLA1) expressed on all cells - present peptide to CD8 cells
HLA D (HLA2) expressed on APCs - present peptides to CD4 T cells
HLA class 2 association (HLA-DR4 in RA) implicates CD4 T cells and B cells - RA involves autoantibodies

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24
Q

Compare the implications of HLA mutations in ankylosing spondylitis vs RA

A

HLA class 1 association (eg HLA-B27 in Ankylosing spondylitis) implicates CD8 T cells in pathogenesis
HLA class 2 association (HLA-DR4 in RA) implicates CD4 T cells and B cells

This fits with autoantibodies (made by B cells) in RA but not in Ank Spond

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25
Describe the pattern of join involvement in RA
Symmetrical Polyarthritis Affects both small and large joints, but nearly always small joints involved - particularly hands and feet
26
What are the most commonly affected joints in RA?
Metacarpophalangeal joints (MCP) Proximal interphalangeal joints (PIP) Wrists Knees Ankles Metatarsophalangeal joints (MTP)
27
Compare hands affected by RA and OA
RA - prolonged morning and inactivity stiffness OA - pain worse with activity
28
What are the systemic extra-articular features of RA?
Fatigue (very common) Fever Weight loss
29
What are some of the organ specific extra-articular features of RA?
Subcutaneous nodules Lung disease - nodules, ILD/fibrosis, pleuritis Ocular inflammation (e.g. episcleritis) Vasculitis Neuropathies Felty’s syndrome – triad of splenomegaly, leukopenia and rheumatoid arthritis Amyloidosis
30
What are the subcutaneous nodules in RA?
Central area of fibrinoid necrosis surrounded by histiocytes and peripheral layer of connective tissue ~30% of patients
31
What are subcutaneous nodules associated with in RA?
Severe disease Extra-articular manifestations Rheumatoid factor
32
Where are the most common locations for subcutaneous nodules in RA?
Hands (e.g. PIP joints) Ulnar border of the forearm
33
What occurs to the synovium in RA?
Synovium becomes a proliferated mass of tissue - **pannus** Neovascularisation Lymphangiogenesis Infiltration of inflammatory cells
34
Which inflammatory cells will you find in RA?
activated B and T cells plasma cells mast cells activated macrophages
35
Outline a healthy synovial membrane?
1-3 cell layer that lines synovial joints Contains: macrophage-like (type A synoviocyte) fibroblast-like (type B synoviocyte) cells - secrete type I collagen Functions: maintenance of synovial fluid
36
What are the cellular and molecular "players" involved in RA?
Autoreactive B cells Autoreactive T cells Cytokines - TNF-alpha, IL-6, (IL-1) Excess of pro-inflammatory vs. anti-inflammatory cytokines (‘cytokine imbalance’)
37
What is the treatment for autoreactive B cells in RA?
Rituximab
38
What is the treatment for autoreactive T cells in RA?
Abatacept
39
What is the treatment for excess pro-inflammatory cytokines in RA?
anti-TNFalpha, anti-IL6R
40
What is the dominant pro-inflammatory cytokine in the synovium in RA?
Tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNFα)
41
How does TNFα contribute to pannus formation?
Inflammatory cell recruitment Angiogenesis Lymphangiogenesis
42
How does TNFα cause joint space narrowing?
Activates chondrocytes - release matrix metalloproteases Leads to cartilage loss - joint space narrowing
43
How does TNFα lead to bone loss and osteopenia?
TNFα activates osteoclasts
44
Summarise the chain of effects of TNFα that leads to arthritis?
45
What are the investigations for RA?
Inflammatory response - ↑ ESR ↑ CRP (sometimes normocytic anaemia - ACD) Rheumatoid factor - antibodies that bind IgG Anti-CCP antibodies
46
What should be noted about an isolated case of a raised RF?
RF can be positive in other autoimmune and infective conditions, and in individuals without disease. Therefore, RF positive in the absence of clinical features does not necessarily indicate rheumatoid arthritis
47
Outline Anti-CCP antibodies
Most specific for rheumatoid arthritis and associated with more aggressive/erosive disease
48
What is the relationship between the presence of autoantibodies and presentation of symptoms?
Presence of specific autoantibodies precedes the onset of symptoms - "a storm brewing"
49
What would be seen in an X-ray of someone with RA?
X-rays Radiographic features of RA: Soft tissue swelling Peri-articular osteopenia Bony erosions
50
What is a limitation of using X-rays for RA?
Information from X-rays is limited to bony structures Bony erosions occur only in established disease. The aim of modern therapy is to treat EARLY before erosions (permanent damage) has occurred
51
What image modality could be used instead of X-rays in early RA?
Ultrasound - (or MRI but is expensive and time consuming)
52
What would be seen in an US of someone with early RA?
Synovitis Synovial thickening (synovial hypertrophy) Increased blood flow (seen as doppler signal) May detect erosions not seen on plain X-ray
53
What is the treatment goal of RA?
**Prevent** joint damage
54
What does the treatment goal for RA require?
Early recognition of symptoms, referral and diagnosis Prompt initiation of treatment - joint destruction = inflammation x time Aggressive pharmacological treatment to suppress inflammation Multidisciplinary input where needed e.g. physiotherapy, occupational therapy, surgery
55
What is can be used for acute management of RA?
Glucocorticoid therapy (steroids)
56
Why are glucocorticoids not suitable for long term management of RA?
Adverse side effects Many and bad Cushing's syndrome, CVD, Infection, Obesity/weight gain, Mania, depression, anxiety, myopathy, sleep apnoea, diabetes Don't need to know the list, just know its some **bad shit**
57
Outline the mechanism of glucocorticoid action
Glucocorticoids bind the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) GR resides in cytoplasm On binding by glucocorticoids, steroid-GR complex translocates to the nucleus and binds DNA response elements, affecting transcription
58
What are the methods of glucocorticoid administration?
Oral prednisolone Intramuscular (IM) methyl prednisolone Intravenous (IV) Intra-articular (IA)
59
What is used for long-term pharmacological treatment of RA?
DMARDs - disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs Immunomodulatory drugs that halt or slow the disease process
60
Outline the first line pharmacological therapy for a presentation of RA?
61
Outline second line pharmacological therapy for a presentation of RA and when you would use it
If disease still active after first line treatment
62
Outline the role of NSAIDs in RA management
Historically used but increasingly less relevant Can provide partial symptom relief but **do not prevent disease progression** Unfavourable long-term side-effect profile
63
What is the "treat to target" concept for RA treatment?
Suppress disease activity to improve outcome
64
How is disease activity measure?
DAS28 = composite of no. of tender joints, no. of swollen joints, patient visual analogue score (VAS), ESR (or CRP) If DAS28 not suppressed -> escalate treatment
65
What are biological therapies?
Biological therapies are proteins (usually antibodies) that specifically target a protein
66
What are the main biological therapy target cytokines in RA?
tumour necrosis factor-alpha IL-6
67
What are the cellular targets of RA biological therapy?
B cell depletion Blocking T cell co-stimulation
68
How is B cell depletion achieved?
Rituximab – antibody against the B cell antigen, CD20 Given as two iv infusions, 2 weeks apart Results in rapid depletion of peripheral B cells
69
How is T-cell co-stimulation blocked?
Abatacept - fusion protein - extracellular domain of CTLA-4 linked to modified Fc portion of human immunoglobulin G1 T cells require 2 signals to activate: MHC + peptide on APC binding to TCR on T cell CD80/CD86 on APC binding to CD28 on T cell Abatacept blocks signal 2
70
What is seronegative inflammatory arthritis?
Family of conditions with overlapping clinical features and pathogenesis Unlike rheumatoid arthritis, **RF and CCP antibodies not present** in blood (“seronegative”) **BUT they are immune-mediated**
71
What are the common seronegative inflammatory arthritises?
Psoriatic arthritis Reactive arthritis Ankylosing spondylitis IBD-associated arthritis (not tested in exam)
72
What is psoriatic arthritis?
Psoriasis is an immune-mediated disease affecting the skin Scaly red plaques on extensor surfaces (eg elbows and knees) **~10% of psoriasis patients also have joint inflammation** Rheumatoid factors not present (seronegative)
73
What is the immune involvement in psoriatic arthritis?
Dominant pathogenic pathway is interleukin-17/interleukin-23 (IL17-IL23)
74
What is the link between skin disease and joint manifestations in psoriatic arthritis?
Skin disease severity not correlated to joint manifestations Examine skin carefully for small areas of psoriasis (NB scalp, umbilicus) Sometimes nail changes may be only manifestation
75
How does psoriatic arthritis present in clinic?
Varied clinical presentations: -Classically asymmetrical arthritis affecting IPJs -Enthesitis (inflammation of tendon insertions) But also can manifest as: -Spinal and sacroiliac joint inflammation -Oligoarthritis of large joints -Arthritis mutilans -Symmetrical involvement of small joints (rheumatoid pattern)
76
What is reactive arthritis?
Sterile inflammation in joints following infection elsewhere in the body
77
Which infections commonly cause reactive arthritis?
urogenital (e.g. Chlamydia trachomatis) gastrointestinal (e.g. Salmonella, Shigella, Campylobacter infections) Reactive arthritis may be first manifestation of HIV or hepatitis C infection
78
What are some important extra-articular manifestations of reactive arthritis?
Enthesitis (tendon inflammation) Skin inflammation Eye inflammation
79
What causes reactive arthritis to arise?
Commonly young adults with genetic predisposition (e.g. HLA-B27) and environmental trigger (e.g. Salmonella infection) Symptoms follow 1-4 weeks after infection and this infection may be mild
80
What is important to note about reactive arthritis?
Reactive arthritis NOT the same as infection in joints (septic arthritis)
81
What are the key differences between septic and reactive arthritis?
*Abx not indicated for joints in reactive arthritis, but may be used to treat underlying infection (e.g. if its an STI)
82
26 year old man Back pain for 1 year. Very stiff in the morning. Loosens up with exercise. Has been taking paracetamol Also pain in buttock region Pain varies from R to L, sometimes both. Bilateral Achilles tendonitis on and off 1) What other questions would you ask?
Ask "red flag" back pain symptoms Look for evidence of extra-articular disease e.g. iritis/anterior uveitis (painful red eye, possibly blurring of vision), psoriasis etc...
83
26 year old man Back pain for 1 year. Very stiff in the morning. Loosens up with exercise. Has been taking paracetamol Also pain in buttock region Pain varies from R to L, sometimes both. Bilateral Achilles tendonitis on and off 2) What clinical signs would you look for on examination?
Look, feel, move. In particular assess for a) loss of normal lumbar lordosis of the spine b) reduced movements (e.g. restricted lumbar spine flexion – ask patient to touch toes) Lower limb neuro exam Systemic exam for signs of extra-articular disease eg psoriasis, uveitis.... *(In back pain, important to consider non-spinal causes/referred pain eg abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) so exam abdomen, but the history here is not in keeping with AAA)*
84
26 year old man Back pain for 1 year. Very stiff in the morning. Loosens up with exercise. Has been taking paracetamol Also pain in buttock region Pain varies from R to L, sometimes both. Bilateral Achilles tendonitis on and off 3) What are the differential diagnoses? State the one you think is most likely
History highly suggestive of inflammatory spondyloarthritis: prolonged morning stiffness suggests inflammation, with characteristic buttock pain of sacro-iliitis Achilles symptoms - enthesis Absence of psoriasis or IBD symptoms/signs - ankylosing spondylitis very likely Possible but unlikely "in the real world" where patients don't give perfect histories is a prolapsed disc
85
26 year old man Back pain for 1 year. Very stiff in the morning. Loosens up with exercise. Has been taking paracetamol Also pain in buttock region Pain varies from R to L, sometimes both. Bilateral Achilles tendonitis on and off What investigations would you do? What might you expect them to show?
1) Bloods and 2) Imaging. FBC, U&E, LFT - important before prescribing drugs ESR, CRP will be helpful in determining the presence of inflammation HLA-B27 - genetic marker of Ank Spond (not in all cases) Imaging is most likely to secure the diagnosis X-ray of sacro-iliac joints + lumbar spine not unreasonable - in this case likely straight to MRI spine+SIJs
86
26 year old man Back pain for 1 year. Very stiff in the morning. Loosens up with exercise. Has been taking paracetamol Also pain in buttock region Pain varies from R to L, sometimes both. Bilateral Achilles tendonitis on and off 5) For your most likely differential diagnosis, outline the likely management plan
First line - NSAIDs NSAIDs fail - anti-TNF-alpha therapy would be second-line Physiotherapy also important to maintain spinal range of movement
87
A 60 year old woman who has recently moved to the UK from abroad attends her GP surgery complaining of long-standing joint pains. Pain affects multiple joints, but especially hands, wrists, and feet She says she received medication for this but can’t tell you any further details of the drugs 1) Describe the abnormalities in the photo
Chronic deformity of fingers. Hyperflexion of index finger DIPJ, hyperextension of PIPJ “Swan neck deformity”. There may be a small nodule over the thumb MCPJ
88
A 60 year old woman who has recently moved to the UK from abroad attends her GP surgery complaining of long-standing joint pains. Pain affects multiple joints, but especially hands, wrists, and feet She says she received medication for this but can’t tell you any further details of the drugs 2) What is the diagnosis?
Swan neck deformity = a sign of chronic rheumatoid arthritis (can also occur in lupus, but less commonly)
89
A 60 year old woman who has recently moved to the UK from abroad attends her GP surgery complaining of long-standing joint pains. Pain affects multiple joints, but especially hands, wrists, and feet She says she received medication for this but can’t tell you any further details of the drugs 3) What tests would you do?
Bloods and imaging Bloods: FBC, U&E, LFT, **ESR, CRP** RF, CCP. (+/- ANA if any symptoms to suggest lupus or autoimmune connective tissue disease) Imaging: x-ray hands (looking for erosions and periarticular osteopenia) If still unsure - ultrasound helpful in detecting active synovitis
90
A 60 year old woman who has recently moved to the UK from abroad attends her GP surgery complaining of long-standing joint pains. Pain affects multiple joints, but especially hands, wrists, and feet She says she received medication for this but can’t tell you any further details of the drugs 4) What treatments do think she might have had?
Likely inadequate treatment given the deformities Maybe she was diagnosed before biologics became available or they weren’t available or affordable in her country?
91
1) Can you summarise the pattern of joint involvement?
Asymmetrical, large joint oligoarthritis
92
2) What do you think the synovial fluid analysis will show?
Inflammatory cells but sterile (This is not septic arthritis – afebrile, normal WCC, CRP up but not very high. Septic joint usually presents as a monoarthritis)
93
3) What will the rheumatoid factor test result be?
Negative – this is a classic reactive arthritis history (“seronegative arthritis” family)
94
4) Likely diagnosis?
Reactive arthritis
95
1) Describe the x-ray image
X-ray of the knee (actually the right knee – but not easy to tell that here as fibula not clearly visualise Severe joint space narrowing medially (femur and tibia are in “bone on bone” contact) Subchondral sclerosis (increased whiteness, indicating bony changes NB subchondral = “beneath the cartilage”) Osteophyte at the tibia medial edge of the joint (bone spur)
96
2) What is the diagnosis?
Osteoarthritis
97
3) Describe the main pathological process in this condition?
Cartilage loss
98
Describe the abnormalities in the photo
swollen, deformed, and have nodular changes bony enlargements of the distal interphalangeal (DIP) joints bony enlargements in the proximal interphalangeal (PIP) joints
99
What are Heberden's and Bouchard's nodes?
Heberden's - bony nodes of the DIPJs Bouchard's - bony nodes of the PIPJs
100
What is the diagnosis?
Osteoarthritis Heberden’s and Bouchard’s nodes is characteristic of hand osteoarthritis History of manual labour increases the risk of degenerative joint disease
101
What tests might you do?
X-ray of the hands looking for: Joint space narrowing Osteophyte formation (bone spurs) Subchondral sclerosis Joint deformities Blood tests (to rule out inflammatory arthritis such as rheumatoid arthritis)
102
Treatment?
Hand physiotherapy and exercises Paracetamol or NSAIDs (Intra-articular steroid injections in severe cases)
103
Describe the abnormalities in the photos
color changes, with a pale, bluish, and reddish pattern - Raynaud's phenomenon
104
What is the diagnosis?
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) is the most likely diagnosis due to: Raynaud’s phenomenon - common in systemic connective tissue disorders Mouth ulcers (common in lupus) Pleuritic chest pain (suggesting serositis, a lupus feature) Fatigue (a common lupus symptom)
105
What are some diagnoses other than you top differential?
Systemic Sclerosis (Scleroderma) – Raynaud’s is common, but skin thickening would be expected Mixed Connective Tissue Disease (MCTD) – Can present with features of SLE, scleroderma, and myositis Primary Raynaud’s Phenomenon – If isolated without systemic symptoms, possibly with a co-morbidity
106
What tests would you do?
ANA (Antinuclear Antibody), Anti-dsDNA & Anti-Smith (Anti-Sm) Complement levels ESR, CRP RF and anti-CCP to rule out RA APL abs - ascertain clotting risk Kidney function - creatinine, urea, proteinuria
107
Summarise the pattern of join involvement
PIPJs affected - DIP sparing Symmetrical, polyarticular joint involvement - affects small joints
108
Most likely diagnosis?
RA Symmetrical polyarthritis with both small and large join involvement Morning stiffness Puffiness of hands - suggests synovitis
109
Any other information from clinical history and exam that would help?
Subcutaneous nodules(ulnar border) Eyes - uveitis Presence of systemic features - e.g. fatigue, weight loss, pyrexia Skin changes, mucosal ulcers (such as mouth), Fmx autoimmune disease
110
Investigations?
Bloods: RF, anti-CCP ESR,CRP ANA (rule out lupus) FBC - for anaemia of chronic disease X-ray of hands and feet (to assess joint erosion, narrowing) US/MRI to detect active synovitis
111
Management?
Physiotherapy DMARDs - methotrexate first line Biologic therapy (e.g. TNF inhibitors) for severe cases (NSAIDs/corticosteroids can help symptoms in flare ups - do nothing to slow progression)