Osteoarthritis Flashcards
(37 cards)
Osteoarthritis is characterized under rheumatic disorders as a what?
Local joint disorder with localized inflammation
T/F Osteoarthritis is progressive and patients will become more symptomatic over time
True
T/F Osteoarthritis shows systemic manifestations
False, OA involves a low level of inflammation at the local joint, and involves formation of new joint tissue in response to cartilage destruction
Is OA a normal part of the aging process
NO
What is one of the first medications given with OA
Tylenol
Osteophytes are also known as
Bone spurs due to excess bone growth
Age when symptoms start with OA
usually after 40
commonly affected body parts in OA
- Lumbar and cervical spine
- joint at base of thumb
- knuckles and tips of fingers
- hip
- knee
- joint in foot above the heel
- knuckle at the base of big toe
LESS commonly affected body parts in OA
- shoulder
- wrist
- elbow
- knuckles at base of fingers
symptoms of OA
- pain
- stiffness
- crackling or clicking in joints
- extra bone growth
- decreased Range of motion
- problems in joint alignment
- tenderness
OA Clinical manifestations
No systemic Cues
Joint pain (Most common reason for medical attention)
- Worsens with use
- Relieved by rest
- Change in temperature or barometric pressure
Pain - worse with activity Stiffness - worse with inactivity - More common in the AM; resolves within 30 min
Crepitus
- typically asymmetrical
Finer deformities in OA
Heberden’s nodes - most distal joint on fingers
Bouchard’s nodes - more proximal on fingers
knee deformities in OA
Bowlegged appearance
3 tests that show early joint changes & can diagnose OA
- Bone scan
- CT
- MRI
Test helpful in staging progression
X-Ray
What can an X-Ray help show in OA
- Joint narrowing
- bony sclerosis (bone thickening)
- osteophyte formation (bone spurs)
T/F Xray does not correlate to degree of pain
True
Are there biomarkers for OA?
No
What will the ESR value be if there is no synovitis present
ESR will be normal
What color would the synovial fluid be in someone with OA
Clear yellow with no signs of inflammation
What are 5 nursing problems we see in OA
Acute and/or chronic pain
Impaired physical mobility
self-care deficit
Imbalance in nutrition : More intake than required
Depression r/t chronic pain
What do we want to do to understand a patient’s baseline for pain in OA
multidimensional pain assessment to get a baseline
Non drug intervetions for OA relating to joint protection
Rest/Joint protection
- maintain functional position with orthotics
- avoid prolonged immobilization
- use assistive devices ( canes, walkers, chair lift)
Weight reduction prn and aerobic exercise
OA drug therapy mild-mod
acetaminophen - if lacking s/s of inflammation
- 3 gm daily
- 4 gm if limited duration or medically supervised
- MONITOR LFT’s