Title: The Evaluation of the Patient in Rheumatology
1The Evaluation of the Patient in Rheumatology
- Emilio B. González, MD
- Professor and Director
- Division of Rheumatology
- Department of Medicine
2Joint and Muscle Aches and Pains - Evaluation
- Articular vs. non-articular. For example,
shoulder pain due to bursitis-tendinitis is
extra-articular, not true arthritis. Also,
referred pain needs to be considered - Inflammatory vs. non-inflammatory
- Monoarticular vs. polyarticular pattern of joint
involvement - Patients age and sex fibromyalgia in young
females, polymyalgia rheumatica (PMR) in older
patients, gout is rare in premenopausal females,
ankylosing spondylitis typically seen in young
males
3Basic Principles
- Polyarticular multiple joints. Example RA
- Mono-articular one joint. Example septic joint
or acute gout - Pauci - or oligo-articular a few joints.
Example reactive arthritis (Reiters Sx) - The pattern of joint involvement is
important!
4More Basic Principles
- Arthralgias presence of joint pain only
- Arthritis pain swelling and/or redness, and
warmth -
- Since pain is a subjective complaint, the
presence of joint swelling (arthritis) adds
objective evidence for the presence of
inflammation!
5Inflammation What To Look For
- Clinical
- Stiffness
- Joint swelling
- Fever, malaise, fatigue
- Weight loss
- Lymphadenopathy
- Laboratory
- ? Sedimentation rate (ESR)
- ? C-reactive protein (CRP)
- Anemia
- Thrombocytosis
- Abnormal serum protein
- electrophoresis polyclonal
- hypergamaglobulinemia
6Joint and Muscle Aches and Pains A
Complete Evaluation
- Systemic signs and symptoms
- Fever, Raynauds, livedo reticularis, digital
ischemia, muscle weakness, nodules, skin rashes - Abnormal labs
- ? WBC or cytopenias, elevated ESR, positive
serologies, CPK and TSH levels, SPEP, renal and
hepatic function abnormalities
7Examples of Systemic Inflammatory vs.
Non-Inflammatory Disorders
- Inflammatory
- Rheumatoid Arthritis RA)
- Systemic lupus
- erythematosus (SLE)
- Viral infections, e.g., hep
- C and B, Parvovirus
- Bacterial infections, e.g.,
- septic joints
- Non-inflammatory
- Osteoarthritis (OA)
- Fibromyalgia
- Depression
- Chronic pain syndromes
- Bursitis-tendinitis (local
- inflammation, not systemic)
- Avascular osteonecrosis
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11Case No. 1
- A 25 year old female with a 6-week history of
polyarthritis. There is symmetrical involvement
of the small joint of the hands and feet - Most likely diagnosis?
- Differential diagnosis?
12The Autoimmune or Connective Tissue Diseases
All Are Inflammatory
- Inflammatory polyarthritis with autoantibodies
- Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) Importance ?
destructive potential - MCTD (mixed connective tissue disease)
- Scleroderma
- Lupus
- Sjögren's syndrome
- Differential diagnosis viral infections such as
hepatitis C and parvovirus B19, among others
13Polyarticular Involvement!
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18Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) vs. Osteoarthritis (OA)
- RA
- Systemic inflammation
- Polyarticular
- Hand PIPs, MCPs, and
- wrists
- X-rays marginal
- erosions, soft tissue
- swelling, osteopenia
- Extra-articular features
- OA
- Local inflammation
- Selected joints hands
- and weight-bearing
- Hands PIPs, DIPs, and 1st
- CMC (base of thumbs)
- X-rays sclerosis and
- osteophytes
- No extra-articular features
19Case No. 2
- A 25 year old homeless male with chronic
oligoarticular arthritis. It is cold outside and
he shows up in the UTMB ER - There is involvement of two toes, right ankle,
and left knee. He has a skin rash at the bottom
of his feet - What other information?
- Differential diagnosis
20Would anybody like to see the rash?
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24Case No. 3
- A 40 year old male with a long history of low
back pain and recent monoarthritis in the right
knee. There is morning stiffness - Diagnostic possibilities?
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27Seronegative HLA-B27-positive Spondyloarthropathie
s
- Ankylosing spondylitis
- Enteropathic arthritis Crohns disease and
ulcerative colitis - Psoriatic arthritis and psoriatic spondylitis
- Reactive arthritis (Reiters syndrome)
- Characteristics
- Asymmetric oligoarthritis Sacroiliitis and
spondylitis
28Case No. 4
- A 25 year old female with acute polyarthritis of
a few days duration. You are called to the ER to
evaluate her. There is involvement of lateral
right wrist and she can hardly move this joint
because of intense pain the right knee is
swollen, and also the left lateral ankle. Her
temp is 39 degrees Celsius - Other information?
- Likely diagnosis?
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30If you could ask her only one question, what
would it be?
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35Infectious Arthritis
- Viral hepatitis C and B, Parvovirus B19, etc
- Septic DGI (disseminated gonococcal infection),
- staph or strep in previously damaged, RA
joints, or - prosthetic joints
- Lyme disease Rare in the Southern US
- Rheumatic fever Rare to uncommon
- Polymicrobial
- AFB and fungal
- Pseudomonas and staph in immunocompromised
- hosts such as HIV patients and drug abusers
- Other salmonella infection in sickle cell
disease, etc
36Case No. 5
- A 65 year old male with acute arthritis in the
left knee. He is hospitalized and 4 days post-op
after an elective cholecystectomy - Alternative clinical scenario he could have
been admitted a few days ago for an acute MI - Other information? Tap?
- Diagnostic possibilities?
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40Case No. 6
- A 55 year old female with chronic monoarthritis
in the right knee - Other information?
- Diagnostic possibilities?
- X-rays?
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44CPPD Whats in a Name?
- Pseudogout acute inflammatory arthritis that
clinically mimics gout - CPPD calcium pyrophosphate crystal
- Chondrocalcinosis x-ray appearance of cartilage
calcification. Many patients are completely
asymptomatic
45Crystal-Induced Arthritis
- Gout Monosodium urate (MSU)
- CPPD Calcium pyrophosphate deposition disease
- Other calcium salts Hydroxyapatite crystals,
typically in patients with CRI, ESRD, Milwaukee
shoulder, etc
46Diagnostic Approach to Patient with Arthritis
- Age, sex
- Mono- or polyarthritis
- Pattern of joint involvement
- Acute or chronic
- Associated Features
- Fever, eye, skin, mucous membrane, bowel, axial
skeleton - Selected laboratory tests
47Overall Assessment
- A given patient may have a lot of complaints
including pain however, if there is no objective
evidence of inflammation, e.g., no joint
swelling, and the lab tests are all cold normal,
e.g., CBC, ESR, CRP, TSH, hep C, including x-rays
? the patient likely does not have an
inflammatory process to explain her/his symptoms.
- If only one joint is involved, exclude a local
orthopedic lesion, e.g. ACL tear, or if it is the
shoulder, obtain a CXR to exclude intrathoracic
pathology with pain radiating to the shoulder
joint. -
- If labs all normal, and with polyarthralgias or
with generalized pain, look for fibromyalgia or
other related disorders, depression, psychogenic
rheumatism, chronic pain syndromes, etc.
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