APPROACH TO MONOARTHRITIS DR CB NEL
Dec 22, 2015
APPROACH TO MONOARTHRITIS
DR CB NEL
“Inflammation of a single joint”
• Acute
• Chronic
WHERE IS THE INFLAMMATION?
• ARTICULAR PERI-ARTICULAR• pain all planes pain in plane of
tendon• active = passive active > passive• capsular swelling/effusion linear swelling• joint line tenderness localised tenderness• diffuse erythema/heat localised
erythema/heat
ACUTE MONOARTHRITIS
Septic arthritis Crystal synovitis Trauma Haemarthrosis Foreign body reaction
Monoarticular presentation of oligo- / polyarthritiso RAo Erythema nodosumo Juvenile idiopathic
arthritiso Reactive, Psoriatic or
other Seronegative spondiloarthropathy
CHRONIC MONOARTHRITS
Foreign body Infection-Tuberculosis Ch. Sarcoidosis Enteropathic Arthritis (mainly Crohn’s) Amyloidosis Pigmented villonodular synovitis Synovial pathology (sarcoma, chondromatosis) Monoarticular presentation of oligo- / poly articular
disease
CRYSTRAL ARTHROPATHIES
Crystal-induced Arthritis• Gout (monosodium urate crystals) most common - First
MTP, ankle, midfoot, knee (can be any joint though) - Most initial attacks affect a single joint - Fever (more common with polyarticular) can raise suspicion for infection
- Presence of crystal does not exclude infection - May see desquamation of overlying skin - Thiazide diuretics can put at risk - Needle shaped, negatively birefringent crystals
• Calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate/pseudogout - Clinically not able to distinguish from gout - Most common in knee and wrists - Evolves over several days (less acute than gout) - Rhomboid shaped, positively birefringent crystals
• Other crystals: apatite, calcium oxalate, liquid lipid
GOUT
URIC ACID POOL
Endogenous Exogenous
Serum urate: 0,12 - 0,55mmol/lUrine urate excretion: 1,5 - 4,4mmol/24 hours
Serum urate: 0,12 - 0,55mmol/lUrine urate excretion: 1,5 - 4,4mmol/24 hours
Intestines (1/3)
Excretion
Kidneys (2/3)
MECHANISM OF HYPERURICAEMIA
• Underexcretion (Most common)
• Overproduction
HYPERURICAEMIA AND GOUT
• Disorder of purine metabolism
• Characterised– hyperuricaemia– deposition of uric acid or urate crystals in the tissues
• Manifestations– acute attacks of gouty arthritis – tophi– kidney stones– urate-nephropathy
PATHOGENESIS
• Hyperuricaemia causes gout, but is not synonomous with gout
• Factors promoting crystallisation (0.55mmol/l)– the level of saturation– solubility– pH and temperature of the limb(colder areas)
PATHOGENESIS
Crystallisation in jointCrystallisation in joint
Crystal absorbed by PMNCrystal absorbed by PMN
Secretion lysozyme enzymesSecretion lysozyme enzymes
Severe synovitisSevere synovitis
ACUTE GOUTY ARTHRITIS
• INCIDENCE
– Mostly men > 40yrs
– Association with Metabolic syndrome
– Sometimes postmenopausal women
(Often on Diuretics)
PRECIPITATING CAUSES IN ACUTE GOUTY ARTHRITIS
• Trauma and surgery
• Medication
• Alcohol
• Diet
CLINIAL PICTURE ACUTE GOUTY ARTHRITIS
• Goes to bed healthy• Wakes up sudden monoarthritis ( 85% Podagra) (heel, instep, knee, wrist and hands and elbow -olecranon
bursitis)• Rigors with severe pain• Night spent in torture• Joint is red (“ripe tomato”),warm and very tender.• After attack skin around the joint often peels off• Acute attacks usually pass completely until the next attack
Uncontrolled hyperuricaemia may lead to polyarticular gout
ACUTE GOUTY ARTHRITIS
DIAGNOSIS OF GOUT
• Family history, as well as a typical history of attacks
• Typical clinical picture and tophi
• Elevated serum urate - (may be normal during attacks)
• Urate crystals in aspiration fluid (as well as tophi)
• X rays: Punched-out erosions (Rat bitten)
URATE CRYSTALS
TREATMENT
• Exclude precipitating causes• Increased water intake 2-3l/day• A low purine diet and avoidance of alcohol are recommended• Foods with a very high purine content: anchovy, sardines, liver and
kidneys. Most meats, fish and chicken products also have a high purine content.
• Treatment of associated conditions such as– obesity– Hypertension– Diabetes mellitus– hyperlipaemia– kidney failure
RX ACUTE ATTACK
• Avoid prescribing prophylactics (uric acid
lowering drugs)
• NSAIDS ( not used in kidney failure)
• Colchicine
• Corticosteroids (in resistant cases)
Progression in the disease
• Asymptomatic hyperuricaemia– continues until possible first attack
• Acute gouty arthritis
• Interval hyperuricaemia– periods between attcks
• Chronic tophaceous gout
• Complications– kidney stones and nephropathy
CHRONIC TOPHACEOUS GOUT
• Deposition of uric acid crystals in the tissues (tophi)
• After repeated attacks after 11 - 12 years• The tophi occur in
– The auricles - helix– Tendons (hands, achilles tendon and feet) – Bursae - especially olecranon bursa– The tophi may ulcerate with secretion of pasty
material
INDICATIONS FOR LONG-TERM PROPHYLACTIC THERAPY
If conservative measures do not have the desired effect and the levels still remain high (> 0.55 - 0.6 mmol/l) with repeated attacks
(If less than 1 attack per year is experienced, treatment is not necessary)
Positive family history of gout and kidney stones with very high urate levels
Chronic tophaceous gout
Kidney stones or nephropathy
MEDICINES FOR LONG-TERM PROPHYLAXIS
• Allopurinol 300mg-900mg/day• Uricosurics medicines
– Probenecid 250mg bd
– Must not be used if there is kidney failure or kidney stones
– To avoid kidney stones a high fluid intake (2l/day) must be
maintained and in addition the urine can be alkalised with something like “citrosoda”
• Colchicine 0.5mg should be added once or twice daily for the first few months in order to prevent recurrent attacks
SEPTIC ARTHRITIS
CAUSESBacterial Gonococcal Non-gonococcal(Staphylococcus aureus , non
group-A beta-hemolytic streptococci, gram-negative bacteria, and Streptococcus pneumoniae)
Viral – HBV, Rubella, Mumps, I.M, Parvovirus, Enterovirus, Adenovirus
Fungal
CAUSES• Most serious cause of monoarthritis, can destroy cartilage in one to two
days• Non-gonococcal are most serious -
most common in knees and hips - sternoclavicular joints in IV drug users
- most febrile but do not appear especially ill - 90% monoarticular, hematogenous spread - 80% Gram(+) anaerobes
* 60% S. Aureus (most PCN, some meth resistant) * 15% Non-group A, beta-hemolytic strep
* 3% Strep pneumo - 18% Gram(-)
- Anearobes on rise in IV drug users/immunocompromised/HIV
• common organisms Staphylococci or Streptococcus• young adults, significant incidence gonococcal
arthritis• Elderly & immunocompromised gram -ve
organisms • Anaerobes more common with penetrating trauma
ROUTES OF INFECTION
Risk factors
• Pre-existing joint disease
• Prosthetic joints
• Low SE status, IV drug abuse, alcoholism
• Diabetes, steroids, immunosuppression/HIV
• Previous intra-articular steroid injection
DIAGNOSIS
• Synovial fluid aspiration– Volume/viscosity/cellularity/
appearance– Gram stain/culture– Absence of organism does
not exclude septic arthritis– Polarised light microscopy
(crystals). Crystals don’t exclude septic arthritis.
– NB suspected prosthetic joint sepsis should ALWAYS be referred to orthopaedics
DIAGNOSIS
• Always blood cultures • Significant proportion blood cultures + ve in
absence of + ve synovial fluid cultures• FBC ESR & CRP• BUT absence of raised WBC, ESR or CRP not
exclude diagnosis of sepsis - if clinical suspicion high always treat
Antibiotic treatment of septic arthritis
• Local and national guidelines
• Liaise with micro. guided by gram stain
• Don’t wait for cultures to start empiric antibiotic treatment
• Conventionally given iv for 2 weeks or until signs improve, then orally for around 4 weeks
Joint drainage & surgical options
• Medical aspiration, surgical aspiration via arthroscopy or open arthrotomy
• Suspected hip sepsis – early orthopaedic referral – may need urgent open debridement
QUESTIONS?