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1. APPROACH TO PATIENT WITH MONOARTHRITIS Dr Maryum khalil
HO MU1 HFH
2. MONOARTHRITIS
Inflammation of a single joint
*Acute
*Chronic
3. CAUSES OF ACUTE MONOARTHRITISIN A PREVIOUSLY NORMAL JOINT:
Septic arthritis
Crystal synovitis
Trauma
Haemarthrosis
Foreign body reaction
Monoarticular presentation of oligo- / polyarthritis
R.A
Erythema nodosum
Juvenile Idiopathic arthritis
Reactive, Psoriatic or other Seronegative spondarthritis
4. IN A PREVIOUSLY ABNORMAL JOINT DAMAGED JOINT:
Pseudogout in assc with O.A
Bone disease
Cartilage disease
Haemarthrosis
Septic arthritis EXISTING INFLAMMATORY DISEASE ( WITH OR WITHOUT DAMAGE):
Septic arthritis
Exacerbation of underlying disease
5. CAUSES OF CHRONIC MONOARTHRITIS Foreign body
Infection
Ch. Sarcoidosis
Enteropathic Arthritis (mainly Crohns)
Amyloidosis
Pigmented villonodular synovitis
Synovial pathology (sarcoma, chondromatosis)
Monoarticular presentation of oligo- / poly articular disease
6. HISTORY & PHYSICAL EXAMINATION Acute monoarthritis can be the initial manifestation of many joint disorders. The first step in diagnosis is to verify that the source of pain is the joint, not the surrounding soft tissues. The most common causes of monoarthritis are crystals (i.e., gout and pseudogout), trauma, and infection. A careful history and physical examination are important because diagnostic studies frequently are only supportive.
7. DIAGNOSTIC CLUES Clues from history and physical examination
Sudden onset of pain in seconds or minutes
Onset of pain over several hours or one to two days
Insidious onset of pain over days to weeks
Diagnoses to consider
Fracture, internal derangement, trauma,
Infection, crystal deposition disease, other inflammatory arthritic condition
Indolent infection, osteoarthritis, infiltrative disease, tumor
8. Intravenous drug use, immunosuppression
Previous acute attacks in any joint, with spontaneous resolution
Recent prolonged course of corticosteroid therapy
Coagulopathy, use of anticoagulants
Urethritis, conjunctivitis, diarrhea, and rash
Psoriatic patches or nail changes such as pitting
Septic arthritis
Crystal deposition disease, other inflammatory arthritic condition
Infection, avascular necrosis
Hemarthrosis
Reactive arthritis
Psoriatic arthritis
9. Use of diuretics, presence of tophi, history of renal stones
Eye inflammation, low back pain
Young adulthood, migratory polyarthralgias, inflammation
Hilar adenopathy, erythema nodosum
Gout
Ankylosing spondylitis
Gonococcal arthritis of the tendon sheaths of hands and feet, dermatitis
Sarcoidosis
10. DIAGNOSTIC STUDIES 1-SYNOVIAL FLUID EXAM:
Arthrocentesis is required in most patients with monoarthritis and is mandatory if infection is suspected. In some instances, obtaining as little as one or two drops of synovial fluid can be useful for culture and crystal analysis.
Cell counts
Microscopy
C/S
11. Categorization of Synovial Fluid Noninflammatory: <2,000 WBC per mm3
Osteoarthritis
Trauma
Avascular necrosis
Charcot's arthropathy
Hemochromatosis
Pigmented villonodular synovitis
Inflammatory: >2,000 WBC per mm3
Septic arthritis
Crystal-induced monoarthritis (e.g., gout, pseudogout)
Rheumatoid arthritis
Spondyloarthropathy
SLE
Juvenile R.A
Lyme disease
12. MICROSCOPY:
C/S:
Synovial fluid cultures are more likely to be positive in patients with nongonococcal arthritis (90 percent) than in those with gonococcal arthritis (less than 50 percent).
13. 2- CBC & ESR
4- BLOOD CULTURE
Blood cultures should be obtained in patients with suspected septic arthritis. Cultures are positive in about 50 percent of nongonococcal infections but are rarely positive (about 10 percent) in gonococcal infection.
Pharyngeal, urethral, cervical, and rectal swabs are necessary if gonococcal infection is suspected
14. 5-RADIOGRAPHY:
Although plain-film radiographs often show only soft tissue swelling, they are indicated in patients with a history of trauma or patients who have had symptoms for several weeks. Occasionally, unsuspected bony lesions, such as osteomyelitis or malignancy, may be detected.
17. 5-MRI:
Magnetic resonance imaging is superior in detecting ischemic necrosis, occult fractures, and meniscal and ligamentous injuries.
18. 6-RADIONUCLIDE SCANS:
Radionuclide scanning can detect infection in deep-seated joints.
7- OTHERS:
Other diagnostic procedures, such as synovial biopsy or arthroscopy, may be useful to rule out deposition diseases (e.g., hemochromatosis, atypical infections) and intra-articular tumors.
20. SEPTIC ARTHRITIS Bacterial
Gonococcal
Non-gonococcal(Staphylococcus aureus , nongroup-A beta-hemolytic streptococci, gram-negative bacteria, and Streptococcus pneumoniae)
Viral HBV, Rubella, Mumps, I.M, Parvovirus, Enterovirus, Adenovirus
Fungal
21. MANAGEMENT 1- Hospitalization
2- Gen. Supportive care
3- I/V Antibiotics
4- Repeated Arthrocentesis
5- Surgical Drainage
22. CRYSTAL INDUCED SYNOVITIS A- GOUT:
ACUTE:
NSAIDs, Glucocorticoids,Colchicine
CHRONIC:
Allopurinol, Uricosuric Drugs
23. B- PSEUDOGOUT:
- May present as acute mono- or oligoarthritis mimicking Gout, or as a chronic polyarhthritis mimicking R.A & O.A
- NSAIDs, Glucocorticoids, Colchicine
C- APATITE DISEASE:
- May present with periarthritis or tendinitis
- Rx same as Pseudogout
24. QUESTIONS
25. A 67 year old male presents with his first episode of knee pain and swelling together with the following x-ray. Which of the following investigations is the next investigation indicated diagnostically?
(a) Thyroid function tests
(b) Serum urate
(c) Knee aspiration
(d) Serum iron
(e) Skeletal survey
26. The following pelvic x-ray displays radiographic features of which of the following rheumatic disorders? (a)Rheumatoid arthritis
(b) Pagets disease
(c) Osteonecrosis
(d) Osteoarthritis
(e) None of the above
27. Which of the following types of joint involvement is not seen in psoriatic arthritis? (a) Symmetrical small joint arthropathy
(b) Jaccouds arthropathy
(c) Sacroiliitis
(d) Monoarthritis
(e) DIP joint arthropathy
28. In septic arthritis which one of the following pairings is most commonly found in hospital practice? (a) Ankle joint and Staph Aureus
(b) Knee joint and MRSA
(c) Wrist joint and Beta haemolytic streptococci
(d) Knee joint and Staph Aureus
(e) Hip joint and Staph Aureus
29. TAKE HOME MESSAGE