Title: INTRODUCTION TO RHEUMATOLOGY
1INTRODUCTION TO RHEUMATOLOGY
- KATHRYN DAO, MD
- Arthritis Consultation Center
- July 21, 2005
2What am I? I am the size of a rabbit with fur
as smooth as an otter. I have a spongy
beak covered with sensitive skin. I am a
monotreme. I protect myself with poisonous spurs
from my hind legs My name means "flat feet."
3Why even care?
3500 rheumatologists
- 2002 CDC reported arthritis as the leading cause
of disability in the US. - 55.4 million have chronic joint symptoms lasting
for more than 3 months - 21.5 million have not seen a physician
- 2 million have activity limitations
- 25 will be unable to work within 7 years of
disease onset - Direct and indirect costs are estimated at 1 of
the US gross domestic product 86.2 billion
Center for Disease Control and Prevention. MMWR
200453383-6. Center for Disease Control and
Prevention. MMWR 200453388.
4Musculoskeletal Complaint
Joint Pain
Joint Swelling
Diffuse/Systemic Sxs
Initial Rheumatic History and Physical Exam to
Determine 1. Is it articular 2. Is it acute or
chronic? 3. Is inflammation present? 4. How
many/which joints are involved? 5. Are there RED
FLAGS?
5Goals of Assessment
- Identify Red Flag conditions
- Conditions with sufficient morbidity/mortality to
warrant an expedited diagnosis - Make a timely diagnosis
- Common conditions occur commonly
- Many SkM conditions are self-limiting
- Some conditions require serial evaluation over
time to make a Dx - Provide relief, reassurance and plan for
evaluation and treatment
6RED FLAG CONDITIONS
- FRACTURE
- INFECTION
- ORGAN INVOLVEMENT
7Articular vs. Periarticular
- Finding ARTICULAR PERIARTICULAR
- Pain Diffuse, deep "point" tenderness
- ROM Pain Activepassive Active motion
- in all planes in few planes
- Swelling Common Uncommon
8Peri-/Non-articular Pain
- Fibromyalgia
- Fracture
- Bursitis, Tendinitis, Enthesitis, Periostitis
- Carpal tunnel syndrome
- Polymyalgia rheumatica
- Sickle Cell Crisis
- Raynauds phenomenon
- Reflex sympathetic dystrophy
- Myxedema
9Inflammatory vs Noninflammatory
10Formulating a Differential Dx
Condition Articular Nonarticular
Inflammatory Septic Gout Rheumatoid arthritis Psoriatic arthritis Bursitis Enthesitis PMR Polymyositis
Noninflammatory Osteoarthritis Charcot Joint Fracture Fibromyalgia Carpal tunnel RSD
11Mono/Oligo vs Polyarticular
- Less than 4 joints
- Osteoarthritis
- Fracture
- Osteonecrosis
- Gout or Pseudogout
- Septic arthritis
- Lyme disease
- Reactive arthrtis
- Tuberculous/Fungal arthritis
- Sarcoidosis
- 4 or more joints
- Osteoarthritis
- Rheumatoid arthritis
- Psoriatic arthritis
- Viral arthritis
- Serum Sickness
- Juvenile arthritis
- SLE/PSS/MCTD
12History Clues to Diagnosis
- Age
- Young JRA, SLE, Reiter's, GC arthritis
- Middle Fibromyalgia, tendinitis, bursitis, LBP
RA - Elderly OA, crystals, PMR, septic, osteoporosis
- Sex
- Males Gout, AS, Reiter's syndrome
- Females Fibrositis, RA, SLE, osteoarthritis
- Race
- White PMR, GCA and Wegener's
- Black SLE, sarcoidosis
- Asian RA, SLE, Takayasu's arteritis, Behcet's
13Rheumatic Review of Systems
- Constitutional fever, wt loss, fatigue
- Ocular blurred vision, diplopia, conjunctivitis,
dry eyes - Oral dental caries, ulcers, dysphagia, dry mouth
- GI hx ulcers, Abd pain, change in BM, melena,
jaundice - Pulm SOB, DOE, hemoptysis, wheezing
- CVS angina/CP, arrhythmia, HTN, Raynauds
- Skin photosensitivity, alopecia, nails, rash
- CNS HA, Sz, weakness, paraesthesias
- Reproductive sexual dysfunction, promiscuity,
genital lesions, miscarriages, impotence - SkM joint pain/swelling, stiffness,
ROM/function, nodules
14Rheumatic Review of Systems
- Fever/Constitutional septic arthritis,
vasculitis, Stills disease - Ocular Reiters, Behcets, Sjogrens, Cataracts
(steroids) - Oral Sjogrens, Lupus, GC, myositis, drugs
- GI Reactive arthritis, IBD, hepatitis,
Polyarteritis, Scleroderma - Pulm SLE, RA lung, Churg-Strauss, Wegeners,
Scleroderma - CVS Vasculitis, PSS, Raynauds, antiphospholipid
syndrome - Skin SLE, psoriatic, vasculitis, Kawasaki
syndrome - CNS lupus carpal tunnel, antiphospholipid,
vasculitis - GYN/GU antiphospholipid, SLE, Reiters, Behcets,
CTX - Musculoskeletal Gout, RA, OA, fibromyalgia,
fracture
15Onset Chronology
- Acute Fracture, septic arthritis, gout,
rheumatic fever, Reiter's syndrome - Chronic OA, RA, SLE, psoriatic arthritis,
fibromyalgia - Intermittent gout, pseudogout, Lyme, palindromic
rheumatism, Behcet's, Familial Mediterranean
Fever - Additive OA, RA, Reiter's syndrome, psoriatic
- Migratory Viral arthritis (hepatitis B),
rheumatic fever, GC arthritis, SLE
16Location
17Initial Rheumatic History and Physical Exam to
Determine 1. Is it articular 2. Is it acute
or chronic? 3. Is inflammation present? 4. How
many/which joints are involved?
Musculoskeletal Complaint
- Nonarticular Condition
- Trauma/Fracture
- Fibromyalgia
- Polymyalgia Rheumatica
- Bursitis
- Tendinitis
Is it Articular?
No
Yes
Is Complaint gt 6 wks Duration?
Yes
Is Inflammation Present? 1. Is there prolonged
AM stiffness? 2. Is there soft tissue
swelling? 3. Are there systemic symptoms? 4. Is
the ESR or CRP elevated?
No
Chronic
- Acute Arthritis
- Infectious Arthritis
- Gout
- Pseudogout
- Reiters Syndrome
- Initial Presentation of Chronic Arthritis
Acute
No
Yes
Chronic Inflammatory Arthritis
- Chronic Inflammatory
- Mono/oligoarthritis
- Consider
- Indolent infection
- Psoriatic Arthritis
- Reiters Syndrome
- Pauciarticular JA
Chronic Noninflammatory Arthritis
lt4
How Many Joints Involved?
Are DIP, CMC, Hip or Knee Involved?
4
Chronic Inflammatory Polyarthritis
No
Yes
No
- Consider
- Psoriatic Arthritis
- Reiters Syndrome
Is it Symmetric?
- Unlikely to be
- Osteoarthritis
- Consider
- Osteonecrosis
- Charcot Arthritis
Osteoarthritis
Yes
- Consider
- SLE
- Scleroderma
- Polymyositis
Rheumatoid Arthritis
Are PIP, MCP or MTP Joints Involved?
No
Yes
Adapted from J. Cush, MD
18Know It When You See It
- Hard bony enlargements
- Heberdens nodes at the DIP joints
- Bouchards nodes at the PIP joints
- Often have squared first CMC joint due to
osteophytes at that joint
Osteoarthritis
19Know It When You See It
- Soft synovial swelling
- Synovitis and volar subluxation at the MCP joints
- Synovitis of the wrists
- Synovitis of the PIP joints with early swan neck
deformities
Rheumatoid arthritis
20Rheumatoid Arthritis Late Stages
- Deformities
- Nodules
- Tendon Rupture
21Know It When You See It
Jaccouds Deformity of SLE
22Know It When You See It
- Often associated with
- Inflammatory eye disease
- Balanitis, oral ulceration, or keratoderma
- Enthesopathy
- Sacroiliitis
Seronegative asymmetric arthritis
23Know It When You See It
- Inflammation of the DIP joints
- Sausage fingers
- Joint involvement shows radial pattern
- Nail changes
- Psoriatic patches
- Arthritis may start before the skin
Psoriatic arthritis
24Know It When You See It
- May look like psoriasis or syphilis
- Can occur in patches or as sterile pustules
Keratoderma blennorrhagica in Reiters syndrome
25Know It When You See It
- Butterfly/Malar rash
- Involves cheeks, spares nasolabial fold
Systemic lupus erythematosus
26Know It When You See It
Dermatomyositis
Interarticular dermatitis of SLE
Both have periungual erythema
27Know It When You See It
- Periungual changes
- Seen in lupus erythematosus, dermatomyositis, and
scleroderma - Thickening of capillary loops
- Dropout of capillary loops
- Hemorrhage in the nail fold may also be present
28Know It When You See It
Mantle aka Shawl Sign of Dermatomyositis
29Know It When You See It
- Not usually associated with systemic disease
Linear scleroderma
30Know It When You See It
- Appears in a broad- based interrupted pattern in
systemic vasculitis, including SLE - May occur as a fine, connected, lacy pattern in
normals
Livedo reticularis
31Know It When You See It
- Can be 1o or 2o
- Stress/cold can trigger
- Keep extremities and body warm
Raynauds phenomenon
32Know It When You See It
- Characteristic of dermal vasculitis
Palpable purpura
33Know It When You See It
- Relapsing polychondritis
- May also occur in Wegeners granulomatosis and
syphilis
Saddle nose deformity
34Know It When You See It
Left Ear changes with inflammation in the
cartilage and swelling
Right Loss of ear cartilage in late stages
Relapsing Polychondritis
35Know It When You See It
- Tophi appear rather late in gout
- Prick the tophus with a needle. Put the drop of
material on a slide
Gout
36Know It When You See It
Polarizer
Pseudogout CPPD)
Gout (Uric Acid)
37Know It When You See It
- Usually a few lesions
- Usually found on the extremities
Skin pustule with disseminated gonorrhea
38Know It When You See It
- Tap if joint/bursa infection suspected
- Do not tap through cellulitis
Infection
39Know It When You See It
- A true connective-tissue disease
- Left Hypermobility of joints. Can touch thumb
to volar surface of forearm - Right Hyperelasticity of skin
- Associated with vascular abnormalities
Ehlers-Danlos syndrome
40Know It When You See It
- Acropachy
- Right Soft tissue swelling between joints
- Left Periosteal new bone formation
Hyperthyroidism
41Know It When You See It
- Shoulder pad sign
- The worst case you are likely to see
- Patient also has macroglossia and purpura
Amyloidosis
42Rheumatologic Assessments
- LABS DO NOT MAKE A DIAGNOSIS HP DOES!
- How can labs lead you astray?
- ESR/CRP Origins and associations
- Serologies (RF, ANA, CCP, APL, ANCA) when to do
in what OTHER diseases are they positive? - Arthrocentesis for diagnosis
43RHEUMATOSCREEN PLUS
?
- CBC differential
- Chem-20
- Uric acid
- Urinalysis
- ESR
- C-reactive protein
- RPR
- CPK
- Aldolase
- ASO titer
- Immune complexes
- TFTs w/ TSH
- EBV titers
- Lupus anticoag.
- Cardiolipin Ab
- c-ANCA
- anti-PR3, -MPO
- anti-GBM
- SPEP
- Lyme titer
- HIV
- Chlamydia Ab.
- Parvovirus B19
- HBV, HCV, HAV
- HLA typing
- CCP Ab
- IgM- RF
- ANA
- ENA (SSA, SSB, RNP, Sm)
- dsDNA-Crithidia
- Scl-70, Jo-1
- Histone Abs
- Ribosomal P Ab
- Coombs
- C3, C4
- CH50
- Cryoglobulins
- West Nile Ab
CUSHY LABS INC. YOUR INDECISION IS OUR BREAD AND
BUTTER
44Presbyterian Hosp. CheapoScreen
CBC diff 35.00 Chem-20
108.00 Urinalysis 30.00 ESR or CRP
25.30 Uric acid 40.00
238.30
CUSHY LABS INC. YOUR INDECISION IS OUR BREAD AND
BUTTER
45Further Investigations
- Many conditions are self-limiting
- Consider when
- Systemic manifestations (fever, wt.loss, rash,
etc) - Trauma (do exam or imaging for Fracture, ligament
tear) - Neurologic manifestations
- Lack of response to observation symptomatic Rx
(lt6wks) - Chronicity ( gt 6 weeks)
46Acute Phase Reactants
- Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate (nonspecific)
- C-Reactive Protein (CRP)
- Fibrinogen
- Serum Amyloid A (SAA)
- Ceruloplasmin
- Complement (C3, C4)
- Haptoglobin
- Ferritin
- Other indicators leukocytosis, thrombocytosis,
hypoalbuminemia, anemia of chronic disease
47Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate
- ESR Introduced by Fahraeus 1918
- Mechanisms Rouleaux formation
- Characteristics of RBCs
- Shear forces and viscosity of plasma
- Bridging forces of macromolecules. High MW
fibrinogen tends to lessen the negative charge
between RBCs and promotes aggregation. - Methods Westergren method
- Low ESR Polycythemia, Sickle cell, hemolytic
anemia, hemeglobinopathy, spherocytosis, delay,
hypofibrinogen, hyperviscosity (Waldenstroms) - High ESR Anemia, hypercholesterolemia, female,
pregnancy, inflammation, malignancy,nephrotic
syndrome
48Extreme Elevation of ESR
Cause ESR gt 100 () ESR 75 99 ()
Infection 14 (33) 6 (16)
Renal Dz 7 (17) 4 (11)
Neoplasm 7 (17) 4 (11)
Inflammatory 6 (14) 6 (16)
Miscellaneous 4 (9.5) 0
Unknown 4 (9.5) 17 (46)
Total 42 (100) 37 (100)
RME Fincher, Arch Int Med 1461986
49ESR Age
MAge/2 F(Age10)/2
50ACP Recommendations for Diagnostic Use of
Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate
- The ESR should not be used to screen
asymptomatic persons for disease - The ESR should be used selectively and
interpreted with caution....Extreme elevation of
the ESR seldom occurs in patients with no
evidence of serious disease - If there is no immediate explanation for an
increased ESR, the physician should repeat the
test in several months rather than search for
occult disease - The ESR is indicated for the diagnosis and
monitoring of temporal arteritis and polymyalgia
rheumatica - In diagnosing and monitoring patients with
rheumatoid arthritis, the ESR should be used
prinicipally to resolve conflicting clinical
evidence - The ESR may be helpful in monitoring patients
with treated Hodgkins disease
51Case
- 28 yr. old WF presents with sudden onset of knee
swelling and pain 7 days ago. Two days later,
knee resolved but both wrists began to swell. On
day 7, the wrists improved but all PIPs were
swollen and tender. - By day 10 She visits her PCP who examines her and
orders Rheumatoscreen Plus and XRAYs. - He sends her home on OTC ibuprofen, tylenol and
Vicks Vapo-Rub. - she complained of arthritis in PIPs, wrists,
knees and ankles. Tenosynovitis L wrist. AM
stiffness was 4 hours.
52Case
- Day 14 she returns to PCP with low grade fever,
pruritic rash on the trunk and extremities. - Exam symmetric polyarthritis in an RA-like
distribution. Tenosynovitis has resolved.
Urticarial lesions over trunk and extensor
surface of arms. ()2 cm nontender, left
axillary LN. No malar rash, nodules, acne, or
Raynauds phenomena. - Investigations?
53Case
- WBC 11.2
- H/H 13.7 / 38.9 MCV 89
- ESR 123 mm/hr
- SMA-12 WNL, except albumin 3.3, AST-67, ALT 77
- ANA negative
- RF 57 IU/ml (nl lt 30 IU/ ml)
- C3 173, C4 28, ASO 151 Todd units
- Uric Acid 6.6, CCP Ab neg
- Normal SPEP, UPEP, TFTs, TSH, Ferritin
- Others?
54Case
- She returns after 1 wk for LN Bx results
(negative) - Pt. states her rash and arthritis have nearly
resolved. - Exam confirms only mild swelling in knees
- However, her sclera are definitely icteric.
- Next?
55Case
- WBC 11.2
- H/H 13.7 / 38.9 MCV 89
- ESR 123 mm/hr
- SMA-12 WNL, except albumin 3.3
- ANA negative
- RF 31 IU/ml (nl lt 30 IU/ ml)
- C3 173, C4 28, ASO 151 Todd units
- Uric Acid 6.6
- Normal SPEP, UPEP, TFTs, TSH, Ferritin
- HBsAg (), Neg. for HCV, HAV, HIV
56 DDx of Migratory Arthritis
- Viral arthritis (hepatitis B)
- Rheumatic fever
- Gonococcal arthritis
- SLE
- Behcets
57Hepatitis B Associated Arthritis
- Arthritis and urticaria part of the prodrome
- Manifestations due to immune complex deposition
- Before the Jaundice
- Usually while LFTs elevated
- Acute onset
- Additive (RA like) or migratory (ARF like)
arthritis - Often with tenosynovitis
- Synovial fluid inflammatory
- Arthritis disappears with onset of Jaundice
58What am I?