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Inflammation, Crystalline Disorders, and Knee Surgery: oh, my! 22-29 CLINICAL MEDICINE Pearls Lecture 22 – Inflammatory Arthritis Evaluating and treating acute gout Presentation of gout: Exquisitely painful monoarthritis, self-limited, 50% of attacks occur in 1st MTP, 90% of patients experience podagra (meaning they get gout in their big toe) Gout is most common in the big toe, followed by: ankle, knee, finger, elbow=wrist, other joints… Gout is worsened by behavior, especially binge drinking (his example was weekend fraternity parties) EtOH supersaturates blood, so blood is now able to hold more uric acid but as your liver begins metabolizing EtOH, the uric acid begins crystalizing in joints… If you are thirsty, your body is 2L behind where your body should be to be properly hydrated Tophus: large, asymmetric deposit of uric acid crystals at a joint with gout (worse if lead poisoning) Overview of the pathogenesis of gout: Vast majority of gout cases are due to under-excretion of uric acid crystals 5 cardinal signs of inflammation: Redness, warmth, swelling, pain and loss of function Treatment Goals: End acute attack promptly and safely Prevent recurrent attacks Prevent or reverse complications Prevent formation of kidney stones Treat associated conditions (obesity, hypertriglyceridemia, HTN, EtOH excess) Treatment: NSAIDS, Corticosteroids (systemic; be careful with gouty diabetics here!), local joint aspiration & injection, oral colchicine, IV Colchicine (BAD!), parental and suppository Circumstances associated with gout attacks: Page 1 of 28 Trauma, EtOH ingestion, dietary excess, surgery, acute diverticulitis and other febrile illnesses *note: Diuretics decrease uric acid excretion For chronic gout: Treatment: Allopurinol (self-induced pharmacokinetics), which reduces the build-up of uric acid by inhibiting xanthine oxidase: max dose is 800mg Allopurinol is preferred if: Urolithiasis Secondary gout with myeloproliferative disorders (cell lysis syndrome prophylaxis) Renal insufficiency (adjust dose!) Tophaceous gout HPRT deficiency or PP-ribose-P synthetase overactivity Allergy to uricosurics Note: Aspirin reverses effect of Probenecid Indications for Drug Treatment of Hyperuricemia: 2-3 gout attacks, tophaceous gout, chronic arthritis with erosions, renal stones, and asymptomatic hyperuricemia (12mg/dL serum uric acid level; 1100mg of uric acid excretion/24h) Diagnosing acute gout Lab Tests have caveats and limits 1. *CBC with WBC, hematocrit, platelets, red cell distributive width (takes 1hr for results) Provides you with an understanding of your patient’s metabolic health status 2. BUN & creatinine (takes 1hr for results) Provides you with an better understanding of which drugs your patient can handle 3. Arthroscopy look at color, measure volume, do “string test”, look for RBC and WBC, and look at crystals under microscopy [Use Ethyl Chloride numbs surface/cutaneous nerves before injection] 4. Uric acid (takes 24hrs for results) No uric acid draw for acute gout presentation, especially for “virgin” case (meaning new patient to you/ first presentation of gout) b/c it could be falsely high or low, so do uric acid labs when you do a follow-up in 2 weeks Target goal for uric acid: <6mg/dL Joint aspiration in gout Normal Joint Synovial fluid: clear, should “string”- have characteristic thickness that allows it to stretch without breaking Gout Joint Synovial fluid: Gout crystals under polarized light appear: yellow, needle-shaped, negatively birefringent Page 2 of 28 “YUPA”= yellow, urate, parallel to the axis- negatively birefringent Diagnosing rheumatoid arthritis Similar presentation to gout but presents as polyarthritis involving at least 3 joints + rheumatoid factor or anti-CCP Rheumatoid factor (RF) is an IgM antibody against the Fc portion of IgG and is present in ~70% of RA cases in the 1st 6 months and is present in ~85% of RA cases in the 1st 2 years; can be present without the patient having symptoms of RA (FALSE POSITIVES!). +RF test can be indicative of other diseases like bacterial endocarditis, Hepatitis B or Hepatitis C, tuberculosis, syphilis, leprosy infections or pulmonary diseases or cancer malignancy. Elevated CRP or ESR Exclusion of diseases with similar clinical features Duration of these symptoms >6 weeks Erosive disease with typical features of rheumatoid arthritis as above Inactive arthritis but with above criteria Lecture 23 – Hip and Back Pain (Morris Solis) Most common chronic pain Most common chronic pain is back pain with 80% of the population having back pain at some point in their lives. ~8million Americans suffer new back injuries every year with and 400,000 of those suffer disabling back injuries. Twice as many back injuries occurring at home as in the workplace. Can appear as bimodal distribution for hip pain. Elderly: double the risk of chronic back pain with each decade after age 50. Young: chronic back pain occurs with high energy (impact?) sports. Risk factors for back pain: increased caffeine intake, increased alcohol intake, small body size, smoking Common causes of hip/back pain: Anterior: Osteoarthritis/ RA/Fractures Iliopsoas Syndrome Meralgia Paresthetica Posterior: Piriformis Syndrome Spondylolysis Spondylolisthesis Gluteal medius tendonitis Lateral: IT Band Syndrome Page 3 of 28 Greater trochanteric bursitis Meralgia paresthetica Diagnose meralgia paresthetica Painful mononeuropathy of the lateral femoral cutaneous nerve coming off femoral nerve and causing sharp, stabbing, burning pain to radiate down the anterior and lateral thigh. Symptoms are ONLY SENSORY, NO MOTOR LOSS. Causes: 1. Seat Belt Injury (or tight tool belts, body armor or duty belts worn by police, military or carpenters) where seat belt pulls the inguinal ligament, entrapping the lateral femoral cutaneous nerve as it passes through the inguinal ligament 2. Patient with Diabetes mellitus with peripheral neuropathy that presents as meralgia paresthetica. Symptoms should be reproduced with deep palpation below ASIS and tapping over inguinal ligament; worse with standing or walking but improved with sitting. 3. Pregnant patient with a gravid uterus (meaning you can feel she’s pregnant when you do an abdominal exam) that is pushing down on her inguinal ligament, which pushes on her lateral cutaneous nerve meralgia paresthetica. Common in: obese patients, middle-age patients, diabetics, unilaterally in runners Treatments: anti-neuropathic drugs such as Lyrica or Gabapentin (both of these are oral); inject corticosteroids using Ultrasound guidance Lumbar facet arthropathy symptoms Lumbar spine disease that is degenerative arthritis affecting the facet joints in the spine Characteristically presents as lumbar pain that shoots UP the back OR wraps around hip and shoots into the groin/thigh Does not present below the knee Diagnosis: Rotation with extension or extension itself reproduces the pain Medications for neuropathy NO OPOIDS!! Anti-neuropathic medications: Gabapentin, Lyrica… Non-steroidal anti-inflammatories Trineurosol injection? Page 4 of 28 Distinguish snapping hip / IT band / greater trochanteric bursitis Patient presents with “hip pain” Snapping hip Syndrome/Psoas Syndrome Normal: Psoas muscle originates at transverse processes of L1-L4, joins with iliacus muscle at inguinal ligament and inserts on lesser trochanter of femur, acting as the primary hip flexor. Syndrome: tendon or bursa between tendon and hip joint become inflamed and irritated. Common in: Dancers, gymnasts, track and field athletes Presentation: Anterior groin pain with stiffness; sometimes you hear snapping, clicking when hip is in flexion Exam: tight hip flexors and can palpate “snap” when the iliopsoas tendon slides over the iliopectineal eminence IT Band Sydrome Normal: IT band is thick, fascial band formed proximally by confluence of fascia from glut max, glut med, tensor fascia latae, and vastus lateralis; band originates at lateral iliac crest and interts on lateral tubercle of tibia. Syndrome: inflammation along IT band due to overuse Common in: Cyclists and Runners Presentation: lateral thigh and knee pain that worsens when they strike the ground while running, + Ober’s Test Testing: Ober’s test: Dr abducts and extends affected hip from behind patient, then allows hip to drop to exam table gently. If test produces pain, it’s positive. Page 5 of 28 Greater trochanteric bursitis Disease: trochanteric bursa inflammation, specifically in the lubricating sac located between the greater trochanter and gluteus medius tendon/IT band **one of the most common causes of hip pain Presentation: lateral hip pain with possible radiation down the ipsilateral thigh; pain worse when moving hip or laying on affected side Common in: runners or other physically active persons Treatment: NSAID’s and injection Lecture 24 – Osteoarthritis (Warren) Aspiration of a joint with OA Used to obtain synovial fluid to analyze for infection, crystals, blood cell counts, etc. or pull excess fluid out to decrease swelling For more info: google joint aspiration by American College of Rheumatology Imaging for OA – findings on x-ray a c b Radiographs of the knee shows (a) joint space narrowing in the medial compartment (b) with subchondral sclerosis (c) osteophytes 1st line treatments Reduction of joint loading Weight reduction Decrease in stressful activities, learning to work smarter, Using devices to help, especially: crutches, canes, walkers, braces Page 6 of 28 Exercise, Physical therapy Strength exercises especially with exercise bands aerobic activities like swimming ROM activities to keep joints limber agility exercises to maintain daily living skills neck and back strength exercises to keep spine strong and limber Drug Therapy Acetaminophen (dose-dependent drug) Tramadol NSAID’s, such as ibuprofen, naproxen, or celecoxib (cause GI ulceration and renal compromise) Opoids *Glucosamine & Chondroitin, homeopathic and herbals are useless according to Dr. Warren Intra-articular therapy Corticosteroids or Hyaluronic acid injected distal to patella Surgery Most commonly affected joint Gouty arthritis: 1st MTP joint Osteoarthritis: weight-bearing joints: knees, hips, C-spine, L-spine, and feet: 1st MTP joint Other important joints involved: fingers: DIP and PIP; hands: thumb base: CMC; gleno-humeral *Joints that are spared: wrist, elbow & ankle Lecture 25 – Rheumatologic Disorders in Children – Stewart Treatment options for JIA NSAID’s: only for non-severe disease DMARD’s: Methotrexate* safest beyond NSAID’s, Biological TNF inhibitors (etanercept, infliximab), and Clyclophosphamide, Axathioprine Glucocorticoids: reserve for periods of severe disease or overwhelming inflammatory or systemic illness *Note: the child taking immunosuppressive drugs, such as DMARD’s, biologics, or steroids is considered immunocompromised and should not receive live vaccines (such as MMR, Rotavirus, Varicella, Intranasal influenza). Differentiate septic v. RF v. JIA v. HSP Septic arthritis: involves a single joint that is visibly red, swollen, warm and markedly tender Presentation: fever, refusal to bear weight, elevated CRP and ESR Testing: Arthrocentesis, Analysis of synovial fluid *Urgent Diagnosis necessary to prevent complications Reactive Arthritis/Reiter’s Disease/syndrome: joint involvement typically asymmetric peripheral oligoarthritis of large joints (usually weight-bearing joints, like knees, hips, ankles, although shoulders, wrists and elbows can be affected) as well as enthesitis, dactylitis, and inflammatory back pain. Extraarticular signs may or may not be present and are nonspecific: conjunctivitis or uveitis, constitutional symptoms, nail changes, oral mucosal ulcers and balanitis. Classic Triad: “you can’t see, you can’t pee, and you can’t climb a tree” Conjunctivitis, urethritis, arthritis Causes: follows an infection outside of the joint Page 7 of 28 Enteric diarrhea Causes: Salmonella, Shigella, Yersinia, Campylobacter jejuni, Giardia Genitourinary Tract infections/ Urethritis Causes: Chlamydia, Ureaplasma, N. gonorrhoeae, Reiter’s Syndrome Presentation: onset of symptoms 1-4 weeks after initial infection Lab findings: may or may not reveal initial organism Elevated acute phase reactants Inflammatory joint fluid without identifiable organism Note: X-ray is not diagnostic Treatment: address underlying infection, NSAID’s, supportive care JIA: grouping of diseases that includes arthritis in at least 1 joint that persists for at least 6 weeks with an age of onset younger than 16 Yo; most common rheumatic disease of children Pathogenesis: Unknown: thought to be autoimmune or auto-inflammatory; presence of a dense infiltration of mononuclear and plasma cells in the synovium Increased cytokines (IL-6, IL-1, TNF) and inflammatory cells migrate into the synovial fluid, damaging synovial tissue, cartilage and bone, causing abnormal bone mineralization and skeletal maturation that is more prominent during pubertal growth spurts Presentation: Diagnostic Criteria: joint effusion OR 2 of the following criteria: Stress pain Limited ROM Warmth Erythema Types of JIA: 1. Systemic JIA Epidemiology: Peak age 2-4Yo; more common in girls than boys Presentation: Daily fevers for at least 2 weeks accompanied by rash (faint, erythematous, salmoncolored, macular rash with discrete border) on the trunk and proximal extremities as well as visceral involvement, particulary hepatospenomegaly, lymphadenopathy and serositis (pericarditis, myocarditis, and pleuritis) Lab findings: Negative RF, ANA rarely positive, high levels of ferritin, anemia of chronic disease, elevated inflammatory markers (e.g. thrombocytosis >1million), and occasional leukemoid reaction Prognosis: most difficult to control of the 3 types; 50% of arthritis cases remit within 1 year Complications: severe destructive joint disease, growth abnormalities (leg length discrepancy), macrophage activation syndrome (rare, fatal, involves persistent high fever, pancytopenia, low ESR, abnormal liver function, encephalopathy, and disseminated intravascular coagulation) 2. Pauciarticular JIA Epidemiology: 1-5 Yo; more common in girls than boys (4:1) Presentation: <5 joints affected; knee and ankle most commonly affected, followed by elbows and wrists Aysmptomatic uveitis in 30% of cases, causing characteristic yellow cataracts Lab findings: nonspecific; 70% have positive ANA, which predicts a higher risk of developing uveitis Types of Parciarticular JIA: Persistent: involves 4 or fewer joints for at least 6 mo. Page 8 of 28 Extended: extends to involve 5 or more joints after the 1st 6 mo. 3. Polyarticular Epidemiology: bimodal: 1-3 Yo AND adolescents; more common in girls than boys Presentation: Involves 5 or more joints in the 1st 6 mo., generally C spine, hips, shoulders, tempomandibular joints; often accompanied by fatigue, fever, rheumatoid nodules Types: RF positive: most common presentation: symmetric in early adolescent girls with a high risk of severe erosive joint disease and poorer functional outcomes RF negative: fewer joints involved with 10% being destructive joint disease Enthesitis-related Arthritis: arthritis accompanied by enthesitis/inflammation of tendon/ligament insertion points OR arthritis PLUS 2 of the following criteria: 1. Sacroiliac joint tenderness OR inflammatory spinal pain 2. + HLA B27 3. + FH of uveitis with pain, IBD, or HLA B27 disease 4. Anterior uveitis with pain, erythema, or photophobia Children may develop: Acute anterior uveitis, spondyloarthropathies (juvenile ankylosing spondylitis, juvenile psoriatic arthritis, reactive arthritis or inflammatory bowel disease associated arthritis) Epidemiology: 9-12Yo; more common in BOYS than girls (9:1) Presentation: large or small joint involvement, specifically in lower limbs and spine (axial involvement, symmetry); progression to polyarthritis Psoriatic: Chronic arthritis and psoriasis OR arthritis with 1st degree family history of psoriasis plus dactylitis or fingernail abnormalities Presentation: peripheral and axial arthritis that presents asymmetrically in small and medium joints, developing into juvenile spondyloarthropathies and may develop into uveitis Lab findings: +/- HLA B27 and usually RF negative Note: arthritis can precede psoriasis by many years Henoch-Schonlein Purpura: IgA vasculitis (most common type of systemic vasculitis in children) Presentation: 1. Palpable purpura without thrombocytopenia and coagulopathy 2. arthritis/arthralgia: oligoarticular, transient, present in lower extremities and buttocks; + periarticular swelling/tenderness; no joint effusion, erythema or warmth; pain and limited ROM 3. Abdominal pain 4. Renal disease: hematuria/proteinuria/nephrotic syndrome, HTN, and renal insufficiency 5. Rarely: Cerebral disease Complications: 1. Belly: primary initial morbidity 2. *Kidney (most serious/common late complication): nephrotic syndrome, HTN, renal insufficiency 3. Brain: hemorrhage Page 9 of 28 4. Skin (purpura, hemorrhage/anemia) 5. Joints (acute arthritis without degeneration resolves with NSAID’s or steroids) Testing: *Monitor BP and UA for renal complications weekly and then at longer intervals if normal Prognosis: initial episode typically resolves within 1 month (67% don’t reoccur) Symptoms of dermatomyositis Epidemiology: peak age in children 4-10Yo more common in girls than boys more common in African Americans Presentation: 1. Progressive symmetric proximal muscle weakness, generally present in the girdle and lower extremities 2. Constitutional symptoms: anorexia, weight loss, malaise/fatigue (meaning general feelings of unwellness and tiredness) 3. Classic Cutaneous findings: 1. Gottron Papules Pathognomonic, shiny, erythematous: atrophic scaly plaques over extensor surfaces of the joints 2. Heliotrope Rash! Accompanied by: malar/facial erythema and photosensitivity 3. Others: periungal capillary changes (dilated capillaries in nail bed; tortuosity and dropout in blood vessels), calcinosis cutis, ulcerations (skin and organ), arthralgia/arthritis Page 10 of 28 Diagnostic Criteria: Must have typical skin findings (heliotrope rash, Gottron’s papules, nailbed capillary findings, dystrophic calcinosis) PLUS 2 of the following criteria: Progressive symmetric weakness of limb-girdle muscles Elevation of serum muscle enzymes (e.g. CPK, aldolase, LDH, AST, ALT) Myopathy on electromyogram Inflammatory myositis on muscle biopsy Complications: Cutaneous: calcinosis, scarring or atrophy, or lipodystrophy; muscular: respiratory failure; Skeletal: osteoporosis, joint contractures, avascular necrosis, arthropathic deformity; Pulmonary; Infection; Gastrointestinal Treatment: When in acute phase: high dose steroids (oral or IV); Immunosuppressive agents: methotrexate, cyclosporine, cyclophosphamide (severe/life-threatening disease), biologic agents; Supportive/Preventative: Sunscreen, topical skin care; Osteoporosis: calcium/Vitamin D; Physiotherapy for aerobic endurance and contractures Diagnosing pediatric SLE Lab Findings: HALLMARK: autoantibody production against self-antigens Antinuclear antibodies (ANA) to DNA: most commonly positive in children with SLE Anti-Smith- sensitivity> specificity Anti-dsDNA- best combo of specificity and sensitivity Complications of HSP Severity typically correlates with initial presentation… <1% develop complications, not including those who develop complications LATE 1. Belly: primary initial morbidity 2. *Kidney (most serious/common late complication): nephrotic syndrome, HTN, renal insufficiency Refer to a nephrologist for: persistent proteinuria, HTN, renal insufficiency 3. Brain: hemorrhage 4. Skin (purpura, hemorrhage/anemia) 5. Joints (acute arthritis without degeneration resolves with NSAID’s or steroids) Page 11 of 28 Lecture 26 – Rheumatic Disease (Berglind) Reiter’s syndrome immunology Involves: HLA-B27 and Molecular Mimicry Pathogenesis: Pathogens, such as, Chlamydia, Yersinia, or Salmonella, mimic auto-antigen and bind to HLA-B27, causing complement activation, inflammation, fibrosis and, ultimately,Ankylosing Spondylitis/Reiter’s RA Immunology Lab findings/Testing: 1. CBC 2. ESR 3. X-ray 4. Rheumatoid factor (RF): IgM or IgG auto-antibody binding to self-IgG Fc Cause: auto-antibody binding self-IgG Fc receptor: possibly genetic (HLA-DR4 alleles, PTPN-22, CTLA-4, PAD14, cytokines) and/or environmental factors (viruses or bacteria) and/or personal health habits (stress, smoking, diet) Development of RA: Molecular mimicry or other factors RA Page 12 of 28 5 Stages of RA Stage 1: healthy synovial joint Stage 2: synovitis Stage 3: Pannus development, destroying cartilage and bone Stage 4: Fibrous Ankylosing (breakdown of bone resulting in a fibrous connective tissue, resulting in a completely immobile joint) Stage 5: no pain or swelling despite bone collapse into a single unit (rather than 2 separate bones). Results in advanced osteoporosis, making joint extension impossible Pathogenesis: EARLY RA: movement of immune cells (T cells, B cells, and PMN’s)= synovitis Edges become hypertrophic 3 Phases of Early RA: 1. Initiation: RF made in normal antibody making process T cells are KEY initiators of RA pathogenesis, activate B cells and macrophages, which make TNF-α and IL-1 Types of T cells involved: Normal: Synovial naïve T cell activates Th17, Th1 cells, which help to regulate other immune cells/immune response RA: impaired production/binding of IL-10, TGF-β to Th17 cell and Regulatory T cell so NO DOWNREGULATION of immune response in synovium autoimmunity. PMN’s are activated to release contents: reactive oxygen species and NO into synovial space. Autoantibodies: RF Potential autoantigens: cartilage Ag, Type II collagen, gp39, cartilage link protein, proteoglycans, aggrecan, Citrullinated peptides (ANTI-CCP: marker of RA), Glucose-6-phosphoisomerase, HLA-DR, Heatshock proteins, heavy-chain binding protein, hnRNP-A2, Immunoglobulins (IgG) 2. Propagation: Immune complex binds Fc receptor on mast cells, leading to mast cell production of *TNF-α*, IL-1, etc. which leads to tissue damage to bone and cartilage, pannus formation, and B cell stimulation to produce autoantibodies Page 13 of 28 1. Breakdown of immune system tolerance (see Initiation step above) 2. Type III Hypersensitivity: autoantibody binds surface of cell/joint surface 3. Complement activation and recruitment of immune cells: PMN’s, macrophages, and mast cells through C5aR but there’s a problem with phagocytosis= frustrated phagocytosis!! 4. Pannus formation, production of MMP’s, cytokines and angiogenic factors 3. Tissue Damage to Bone and Cartilage: Osteoclasts activated, Synovial fibroblasts produce MMP, PGE2, CCL5 and IL-18 Key cytokines in inflammatory arthritis: TNF-α, IL-1, IFN-γ, IL-6, OPGL/RANKL, IL-17 ESTABLISHED RA: arthritis with formation of pannus (when cells of synovium divide and grow) Treatment: must account for autoimmunity + inflammation: Anti-TNF drugs= some success in treating autoimmunity part SLE immunology Deficiency in Complement proteins 2 and 4 HLA-DR2 & HLA-DR3 susceptibilities Pathogenesis Genes/environmental factors Abnormal immune response Autoantibodies Inflammation Damage Page 14 of 28 Cellular Markers Lupus Erythematous cell= PMN-ingested nuclear material Types of Autoantibodies Anti-nuclear Antibodies DNA antibodies DNA-histone complex Antibodies Non-histone protein Antibodies Cardiolipin and Phospholipid Antibodies Pathogenesis Overview: Genes/Environmental Factors Regulatory T cell not turning off autoimmune response and/or APC’s antigen presenting to T cells, which activate B cells to make autoantibodies Triggers: Genetics (C1q, C2, C4 deficiency or IRF5, STAT4 transcription factor deficiency so no appropriate cytokine production to make correct antibody or to shut down immune response) environmental factors (including medications/drugs like procainamide) infections (EBV) hormones (stress-related, sex steroids) drugs Page 15 of 28 Errors in Immune System: If deficiency in Fas can’t destroy cells/ lack of normal immune response/ regulation Role of B cells in SLE: Become hyperactive and continuously secrete auto-antibody Role of T cells in SLE: T regulatory cells aren’t shutting down the autoimmune response and becomes immunogenic and causes production of pro-inflammatory cytokines Role of Macrophages in SLE: Defect in clearance, overproduce interferons, IL-10, ROS Drug Targets: Cytokine inhibitors (anti-IL-1, anti-IL-6, etc.) Inhibition of B cell survival Other targeted therapies (JAK3 inhibition) Plus Some other Stuff Arthralgia Joint pain vs Arthritis joint inflammation Pain, redness, swelling, increased warmth, fluid accumulation, stiffness Why does [central and/or peripheral] tolerance fail? CTLA-4, apoptosis processes Principal fate of lymphocytes that recognize self-antigens in the generative organs is death (deletion) BUT: some B cells may initiate T cells’ specificity into regulatory (suppressive) T lymphocytes Lecture 27 – Immune Mediated Musco… (Kilgore) Reiters etiology Classic Triad: “you can’t see, you can’t pee, and you can’t climb a tree” Conjunctivitis: may see anterior uveitis Arthritis: asymmetric and additive/mostly lower extremities Urethritis: urogenital lesions/cervicitis/prostatitis Symptoms start 1-4 weeks after infection and may include: fever, fatigue, malaise, weight loss, musculocutaneous lesions, oral ulcers, and vesicles on palms and soles Page 16 of 28 Acute episode of arthritis that follows an episode of enteric or urogenital infection Epidemiology: more common in HLA-B27 positive patients Causes: enteric pathogens: specifically Salmonella, Shigella, Yersinia, and Campylobacter jejunii OR non-enteric/genitourinary pathogens: Chlamydia Treatment: NSAID’s for acute arthritis antibiotics for treatment of acute non-gonococcal urethritis intralesional glucocorticoid injections for severe tendonitis glucocorticoids to prevent blindness from uveitis SLE epidemiology and diagnostic criteria Systemic Lupus Erythematous: multisystem, autoimmune disorder of unknown etiology that is strongly associated with various autoantibodies Epidemiology: women to men (7-15:1) Causes: genetic, immunologic, hormonal and possibly environmental factors Presentation: Cutaneous: facial “butterfly” rash, discoid lesions, oral and nasal mucosa ulcers, alopecia; Renal: lupus nephritis (most serious finding): classified from I-IV and is the leading cause of mortality in the 1st decade of diagnosis. If untreated, lupus nephritis will develop into end-stage renal disease and require dialysis or transplant CNS: headache, seizure, psychosis, Transischemic attack/Cerebral vascular attack (both are types of stroke) Vascular: Raynaud’s (excessively reduced blood flow in response to emotional stress), hypercoagulable state (due to anticardiolipin antibodies, lupus anticoagulant and antiphospholipid antibodies), deep vein thrombosis, vasculitis, and peripheral emboli Cardiac: pericarditis, pericardial effusions, Libman-Sacks endocarditis, myocardial infarction Lab findings: + ANA in >95% of SLE patients, high titers of dsDNA antibodies, anticardiolipin antibody, lupus anticoagulant CBC: low WBC, low platelets and NCNC anemia UA: elevated protein Criteria: Any combination of 4+ of the below criteria whether documented contemporaneously or not, indicates a diagnosis of SLE (specificity: 95%, sensitivity: 75%) 1. Malar Rash: fixed erythema, flat or raised, over the malar eminences 2. Discoid Rash: erythematous circular, raised patches with adherent keratotic scaling and follicular plugging; possible atrophic scarring 3. Photosensitivity: exposure to UV light causes rash 4. Oral ulcers: oral and nasopharyngeal ulcers (must be observed by physician) 5. Arthritis: nonerosive arthritis of 2+ peripheral joints accompanied by tenderness, swelling or effusion 6. Serositis: pleuritic or pericarditis documented with ECG or heart rub or effusion 7. Renal Disorder: proteinuria >0.5g/d or 3+ or cellular casts 8. Neurologic disorder: seizures of psychosis without other causes 9. Hematologic disorder: hemolytic anemia or leukopenia (<4000/L) or lymphopenia (<1500/L) or thrombocytopenia (<100,000/L) in the absence of offending drugs 10. Immunologic disorder: Anti-dsDNA, anti-Sm and/or anti-phospholipid 11. Antinuclear antibodies: abnormal titer of ANA by immunofluorescence or an equivalent assay at any point in time in the absence of drugs known to induce ANA’s Treatment: NSAID’s, topical steroids, IV/oral steroids, Hydroxychloroquine, Cyclophosphamide, Azathioprine Prognosis: ~25% of cases may have remissions; 5-10 years: 90% survival rate; 20 years: 78% survival rate Page 17 of 28 Leading cause of death: renal failure, infections and thromboembolic events Diagnosing Sjogrens Slowly progressive autoimmune disorder caused by lymphocyte infiltration of exocrine glands. Types: Primary Sjogren’s: Sicca syndrome (dry eyes, dry mouth) and parotid enlargement Secondary Sjogren’s: result of ~30% of other rheumatic diseases Epidemiology: more common in middle-aged women than men (9:1) Presentation: Extra-glandular: arthralgia/myalgia, Raynaud’s, GI- low grade pancreatitis/atrophic gastritis, lymphoma Lab Findings: elevated ESR, anti-Ro/SS-A and Anti-La/SS-b, mild normochromic normocytic anemia Labial biopsy with focal lymphocyte infiltration Abnormal tear flow by Schirmer’s test (<5mm in 5 min) CREST syndrome Type of systemic sclerosis (chronic systemic disorder characterized by skin thickening and variable visceral vasculitis and/or fibrosis) Characteristics: C-Calcinosis cutis R- Raynaud’s E- esophageal dysmotility S-sclerodactylyl T-telangiectasias Ankylosing spondylitis epidemiology Type of spondyloarthropathy, which are a related group of inflammatory disorders with clinical features unique among rheumatic diseases. 4 Cardinal Features of spondyloarthropathy: 1. 2. 3. 4. Sacroilitis: inflammation of SI joints Spondylitis: inflammation of the spine Enthesitis: inflammation of tendon insertion sites Uveitis: inflammation of anterior chamber of the eye Page 18 of 28 4 Types: Ankylosing spondylitis, Reactive arthritis, Enteropathic arthritis, Psoriatic arthritis Epidemiology: more common in adolescent boys and young men than girls (2-3:1) Strong association with Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA-B27), especially among Caucasions with Ankylosing Spondylitis (~90%) Prevalence: 4-5% in working adults with chronic low back pain Classic Feature: bamboo spine (fusion between vertebral bodies) Treatment: NO cure. Early Disease: NSAID’s and PT Severe flares: IV Corticosteroids or immunosuppressants (e.g. infliximab, TNF-antibody) Lecture 28 – Nonsurgical knee (Jacobus) Diagnosing gout Aspiration: exam microscopically for crystals Synovial fluid testing: 1. Uric acid crystals are needle-like crystals with strong negative birefringence under polarized light 2. Cell count: WBC >50,000 is strongly indicative of infection 3. Gram Stain and culture Regular CBC, ESR, and CRP from blood Refer for surgical I&D (incision & drainage): to release pus or pressure build-up under the skin; basically, a minor procedure to clean out infected area and promote healing Prepatellar cellulitis vs. septic knee Knee infections: 90% of the time, knee joint should be opened and cleaned out to prevent re-infection Prepatellar cellulitis Bacterial infection of the deep layers of the skin- subcutaneous and dermis- and generally caused by Staph or Strep Presentation: Erythema, warmth, NO effusion, tenderness with superficial palpation, painless ROM Testing: NO aspiration. Regular CBC, may or may not see an elevated WBC Treatment: antibiotics and observation Septic knee Page 19 of 28 MCL strain vs. ACL tear vs. meniscal tears Medial views MCL strain Generally due to valgus stress http://www.sportsinjuryclinic.net/sport-injuries/knee-pain/mcl-sprain Testing: Valgus stress applied while knee in 30° of flexion: + if pain when stress applied to outside of knee Grading: Grade 1: no opening, just pain Grade 2: some opening with endpoint Grade 3: no endpoint Treatment: if an isolated MCL injury, use a brace. Non-arthroscopic surgery only if the MCL has been torn from its insertion on the femur or tibia using large stitches, metal screws, or bone staples OR if MCL tear in the middle, in which case the surgeon will sew the torn ends together. ACL tear: when you plant your foot and then twist knee Presentation: unsteadiness in climbing and descending stairs Page 20 of 28 Meniscal Tear Meniscus only has blood supply only on the periphery Locking or catching of knee with movement Treatment: scope surgery remove portion of meniscus with tear; rarely attempt to repair due to lack of blood supply to the meniscus #1 reason for hemarthroses/bleeding occurring in a joint ACL injury causes acute swelling of the knee joint and indicates serious injury Location and anatomic relationship of pes anserine bursa Normal: The pes anserinus (anserine) bursa, along with its associated tendons, is located along the proximomedial aspect of the tibia. –Medscape Disorder (Pes Anserine Bursitis): tendon insertion along proximal tibia gets pulled out, causing swelling of pes anserine bursa Common in: mid-teens Treatment: Conservative; if needed, injection therapy of platelet rich plasma; no surgery unless significant instability with varus stress causing wide opening of that side of the patella Lecture 29 – Surgical Treatment of Knee Injuries (Jacobus) Why women have more ACL tears than men Normal: Intercondylar notch of femur in women is ½ as thick as it is in men and it has been noted that their smaller notch is correlated with a thinner ACL. Disorder: ACL tear due to #1 narrower width of intercondylar notches of femur and possibly other factors, including limb alignment, muscle imbalance, and ACL width Note: Shoe type (such as high heels and flip-flops) changes the ligamentous structure of your leg Prevention: Brace often used in contact sports for knee injury prevention Note: spontaneous healing of ACL since blood supply is generally disrupted Page 21 of 28 Treatment: Don’t operate if: no meniscus tear. No cartilage injury. Low activity level prior to injury. Operate if: Delays in surgery lead to additional injuries. Additional injuries lead to worse outcomes. Delayed surgery leads to inferior outcome. Recommend that reconstruction be performed without undue delay once swelling has subsided and ROM is restored. Partial Tear: In asymptomatic patients: non-operative management like bracing In symptomatic patients or patients progressing to complete tear: reconstructive surgery Complications: 1. meniscus injury 2. chondral injury 3. Development of Osteoarthritis as a later complication of ACL deficient knees. OA Preventative Treatment: HA or PRP injection to replace viscosity of fluid and lubricate joint Surgical treatment of ACL injuries (see slide 47) Operate if: Delays in surgery lead to additional injuries (e.g. meniscus tears, degenerative changes) Additional injuries lead to worse outcomes (e.g. intra-articular joint damage or meniscal injury) Delayed surgery leads to inferior outcome Recommend that reconstruction be performed without undue delay once swelling has subsided and ROM is restored. Principles of ACL Reconstruction: 1. Harvest of autograft (from patient- different area of body) /Prep of allograft (usually from cadaver or synthetic) Must be contoured to fit tibial tunnel ~10mm Suture placed in both ends of graft 2. Diagnostic arthroscopy Typical entries/portals: lateral to medial parapatellar OR superomedial Once inside, use scope to look for meniscal pathology, Chondral injury, and loos bodies 3. Address meniscal pathology If meniscal pathology present, address by debridement and repair Evaluate ACL tear Page 22 of 28 4. Debridement/Notchplasty Debride ACL stump and fibrous tissue from wall of lateral femoral condyle Notchplasty: removal of 3-5mm of bone from femoral condyle, preventing impingment of graft when knee is in full extension. Resident’s Ridge: ridge of bone on lateral wall of the notch can be mistaken for the posterior border of the notch. True posterior wall of intercondylar notch lies ~1cm posterior to Resident’s Ridge. 5. Tunnel preparation Tibial tunnel will be found posteromedial aspect of the tibial footprint, centered ~7mm anterior to PCL. Externally, guide is placed midway between tibial tubercle and periormedial aspect of tibia. Use guide wire drilled **Slide 47: Femoral Tunnel Placement Offset guide should be placed on “over the top” position, engaging the posterior cortex Graft should be placed as far posterior as possible; anterior placement is a common cause of failure 6. Graft placement and fixation Once tunnels are drilled, Beath needle passed through both tunnels, exiting the anterolateral thigh Sutures tied to graft are attached to Beath needle. Page 23 of 28 Graft is pulled through both tunnels into position by pulling on needle Femoral bone block is fixed with a cannulated interference screw placed anterior to the bone block. Tibial side of graft is secured with interference screw. OVERALL: reliably restores stability and allows individual to return to high (impact?) activity Options for Graft Fixation: Crosspin fixation: soft tissue graft is looped around metal pin inside femoral tunnel. Endobutton fixation: graft is brought through femur and fixed at lateral cortex. Autograft BPTB (bone-patella tendon-bone grafts) Hamstrings Quadriceps vs Allograft BPTB Achilles Quadriceps Tibialis Anterior/Posterior Page 24 of 28 Autograft Pros vs Low risk of inflammatory reaction No risk of disease transmission Potentially more rapid incorporation Potentially less expensive Complications: OA after ACL Reconstruction Cons donor site morbidity MCL strain vs. ACL tear vs. meniscal tears MCL strain Generally due to valgus stress http://www.sportsinjuryclinic.net/sport-injuries/knee-pain/mcl-sprain Testing: Valgus stress applied while knee in 30° of flexion: + if pain when stress applied to outside of knee Grading: Grade 1: no opening, just pain Grade 2: some opening with endpoint Grade 3: no endpoint Treatment: if an isolated MCL injury, use a brace. Non-arthroscopic surgery only if the MCL has been torn from its insertion on the femur or tibia using large stitches, metal screws, or bone staples OR if MCL tear in the middle, in which case the surgeon will sew the torn ends together. ACL tear Cause: ACL tear/rupture typically occurs during a noncontact deceleration event that produces a valgus twisting injury. E.g. basketball player lands on one leg and quickly pivots in opposite direction ACL tear, usually due to hyperflexion injury (sometimes hyperextension but hyperextension often causes PCL injury) Page 25 of 28 Presentation: hemarthrosis within a few hours of injury b/c blood to knee runs through ACL (as well as PCL and peripheral meniscus). Patient often describes injury similar to above and states they hear or feel a “pop” and patient is unable to resume normal activities. Testing: + Lachman’s (most sensitive) and + Anterior Drawer **Most important test: MRI (95-100% accuracy) for diagnosing ACL tear Complications: Magnetic resonance images of bone bruise patterns (lateral femoral condyle and posterolateral tibial plateau) associated with acute anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury. A: Sagittal plane view shows the more posterior location of the tibial bruise relative to the femoral bruise. Arrows point to the hyperintense signals associated with bone bruises. B: Frontal plane view shows lateral compression of the femur and tibia From: http://lermagazine.com/article/bone-bruises-and-risk-of-knee-osteoarthritis 1. Bone bruise is a hidden fracture of the bone that involves the middle portion of the lateral femoral condyle (valgus stress on knee) and posterior lateral tibial plateau (anterior translation of tibia) Diagnosis: visible on MRI that you already ordered for the suspected ACL tear Note: bone bruising occurs in 85% of acute ACL injuries 2. Associated Meniscus Injury: MCL, LCL, or meniscus; Note: Meniscus tears occur with 50-75% of acute ACL tears 3. Lateral Meniscus Triad: ACL, MCL and lateral meniscus (more common of the two triads) 4. Classic Triad of O’Donoghue: ACL, MCL and medial meniscus Page 26 of 28 Meniscal tear Treatment: SURGERY unless tear is on periphery b/c central meniscus is naturally avascular and cannot repair on its own Indications for total knee arthroplasty Limited walking tolerance less than 1 block Attempted physical therapy, tried NSAID’s, injections, walker…. To no avail…. Limitations of activities of daily living (ADL) Acceptable medical risk Surgical meniscal tear repairs Red zone is vascularized; white zone is avascular Page 27 of 28 Presentation: often atraumatic or chronic cause with pain, swelling and catching feel. Joint line tenderness Testing: MRI, + McMurray’s Most tears need to be debrided Repairs have a higher complication and failure rate Repairs are most often successful when paired with an ACL reconstruction *Peripheral tears can be repaired because their blood supply is from the periphery while central repairs should be debrided/ removed because they will not heal as they are naturally avascular Meniscal allografts relieve pain and may not affect arthritis risk Meniscal Surgery Types Resection Repair Replacement Allograft Scaffolding Limitations: longer recovery, poor vascularity with significant re-tear rate, higher complication rate (nerve, vessel, device) and adjuncts to improve success (e.g. fibrin clot, enriched plasma, growth factors) Page 28 of 28