🩻MSK🩻 - Inflammatory & Rheumatoid Arthritis Flashcards
(111 cards)
What are the 2 types of arthritis?
Osteoarthritis (degenerative arthritis)
Inflammatory arthritis
What are the signs of joint inflammation?
Red
Hot/warm
Swelling/fluid
What are the causes of joint inflammation?
Infection - septic arthritis, TB
Crystal arthritis - gout, pseudogout
Autoimmune
Which causes of joint inflammation fall into which category of inflammation?
Infection + crystal arthritis - secondary inflammation
Immune-mediated (autoimmune) - primary
Which causes of joint inflammation are sterile and which are not?
Crystal + autoimmune - sterile
Infection - non-sterile
How is degenerative arthritis immediately distinguishable from inflammatory conditions upon investigation?
No inflammation (red, hot, swollen joint)
Slow speed of onset
Synovial fluid analysis - sterile, no inflammatory cells
Normal CRP
Normal WCC
What would you see in a synovial fluid analysis of the inflammatory causes of arthritis?
Autoimmune - inflammatory cells, sterile
Crystal - inflammatory cells, sterile, crystals
Septic - Inflammatory cells, bacteria
What are the expected CRP levels for the inflammatory arthritises?
Autoimmune - raised
Crystal - raised or significantly raised
Septic - significantly raised
Which is the only arthritis that causes an increased WCC?
Septic
(autoimmune and crystal arthritis can, but it is unusual)
What arthritis is an orthopaedic emergency?
Septic arthritis
What presentation (i.e. collection of symptoms) must always be treated as an emergency in arthritis?
Acute hot, swollen joint (i.e. anything suggestive of septic arthritis)
Treated as septic arthritis until proven otherwise
What investigation should be performed in the case of an acute red, hot, swollen joint?
Joint aspiration
Send fluid for gram stain and culture
What is the management for septic arthritis?
Joint washout (lavage) and IV Abx
What are the types of autoimmune arthritis?
What are the key history and examination points for arthritis?
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)
What is rheumatoid arthritis?
Chronic autoimmune disease
Primary site of pathology is the synovium - “synovitis” = inflammation of the synovial membrane
Where on the body does RA often manifest?
Outline RA in a clinical setting, including the epidemiology and key features
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
What is the aetiology of RA?
Concordance in monozygotic vs dizygotic twines = 15%vs4% - mix of genes and environment
Female
What are some environmental factors for RA?
Smoking
Microbiome
Porphyromonas gingivalis
Poor oral health
How does smoking lead to RA?
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)
What is the strongest genetic risk factor for RA?
HLA-DR
Explain the significance of HLA in RA
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
Compare the implications of HLA mutations in ankylosing spondylitis vs RA
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