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Acute monoarthropathy

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Aims an approach to the investigation and differential diagnosis of acute monoarticular pain focus on septic and crystal arthritis Acute Monoarthritis ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Acute monoarthropathy


1
Acute monoarthropathy
  • Jaya Ravindran
  • Rheumatologist

2
Aims
  • an approach to the investigation and differential
    diagnosis of acute monoarticular pain
  • focus on septic and crystal arthritis

3
Acute Monoarthritis - differential diagnosis
  • Septic arthritis
  • Crystal arthritis
  • Gout (uric acid)
  • Pseudogout/calcium pyrophosphate deposition
    disease (CPPD)

4
  • What are other differentials for
  • acute monoarticular pain?

5
Monoarthritis - differential diagnosis
  • Psoriatic arthritis
  • Onycholysis
  • Subungual hyperkeratosis
  • Pitting
  • Extensor surfaces, scalp, natal cleft, umbilicus
  • Other associated features eg uveitis,
    inflammatory bowel disease, enthesitis,
    Ankylosing spondylitis

6
Monoarthritis - differential diagnosis
  • Reactive arthritis
  • Prodromal GI /GU
  • Infection eg
  • campylobacter,
  • salmonella, shigella,
  • Yersinia,chlamydia
  • Pustular psoriasis
  • and circinate balanitis

7
Monoarthritis - differential diagnosis
  • Trauma - and haemarthroses (warfarin, bleeding
    disorders)
  • Palindromic rheumatism 24-48 hours inflammatory
    monoarthritis, can evolve into polyarthritis eg
    RA

8
Others to think about
  • Osteonecrosis/AVN (steroids/alcohol)
  • Severe pain but good ROM
  • Monoarticular RA
  • Monoarticular OA
  • Prosthetic joint - loosening, or infection
  • Periarticular pathology

9
  • Articular vs periarticular?

10
Is it an articular or extra-articular problem?
  • ARTICULAR PERI-ARTICULAR
  • pain all planes pain in plane of tendon
  • active passive active gt passive
  • capsular swelling/effusion linear swelling
  • joint line tenderness localised tenderness
  • diffuse erythema/heat localised erythema/heat

11
Olecranon bursitis
12
Septic arthritis
  • 15-30 per 100,000 population
  • Fatal in 11 of cases in UK
  • Delayed or inadequate treatment leads to
    irreversible joint damage

13
  • How do you get septic arthritis?

14
Pathogenesis
15
  • Who gets septic arthritis?

16
Who gets septic arthritis?
  • common organisms Staphylococci or Streptococcus
  • young adults, significant incidence gonococcal
    arthritis
  • Elderly immunocompromised gram -ve organisms
  • Anaerobes more common with penetrating trauma

17
Who gets septic arthritis?
  • pre-existing joint disease
  • prosthetic joints
  • low SE status, IV drug abuse, alcoholism
  • diabetes, steroids, immunosuppression
  • previous intra-articular steroid injection

18
Who gets septic arthritis?
  • Skin lesions e.g. ulcers, particularly in context
    RA often source of infection
  • poor prognostic features older, pre-existing
    joint disease presence of synthetic material
    within joint

19
  • What are the signs and
  • symptoms of septic
  • arthritis?

20
Symptoms signs of septic arthritis
  • Typically hot, swollen, red tender joint with
    reduced range of movement, difficulty weight
    bearing
  • Systemic upset
  • Night and rest pain
  • Symptoms usually present for lt 2/52
  • Large joints more commonly affected than small
  • majority of joint sepsis in hip or knee

21
Symptoms signs of septic arthritis
  • In pre-existing inflammatory joint disease
    symptoms in affected joint(s), out of proportion
    to disease activity in other joints.
  • 10-15 of cases, gt one joint - so polyarticular
    presentation does not exclude sepsis
  • presence of fever not reliable indicator- if
    clinical suspicion high - treat

22
  • What investigations are useful
  • in septic arthritis?

23
Investigations
  • Synovial fluid aspiration
  • volume/viscosity/cellularity/appearance
  • gram stain/culture
  • Absence of organism does not exclude septic
    arthritis
  • polarised light microscopy (crystals)
  • NB suspected prosthetic joint sepsis should
    ALWAYS be referred to orthopaedics

24
Investigations
  • 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

25
Other investigations
  • CRP useful for monitoring response to treatment
  • Urate may be normal in acute gout and of no
    diagnostic value in acute gout or sepsis
  • Measure urea, electrolytes liver function for
    end organ damage (poor prognostic feature)
  • Renal function may influence antibiotic choice

26
Other tests?
  • If skin pustule is present, suggestive of
    gonococcal infection, then skin swab should be
    taken
  • If history suggests possibility of genitourinary
    or respiratory tract infection then culture
    sputum (and CXR) urine take anogenital
    throat swabs where appropriate
  • If periarticular sepsis appropriate swabs and
    cultures

27
Imaging
  • Plain X rays no benefit in diagnosis but form
    baseline for any future joint damage. May show
    chondrocalcinosis.
  • MRI useful in distinguishing sepsis from OA but
    less good between sepsis inflammation
  • MRI sensitive for osteomyelitis

28
Imaging
  • Ultrasound useful in guiding needle aspiration eg
    hip
  • White cell scanning helpful in diagnosing
    prosthetic sepsis

29
Antibiotic treatment of septic arthritis
  • Local and national guidelines
  • Liaise with micro. guided by gram stain
  • Conventionally given iv for 2 weeks or until
    signs improve, then orally for around 4 weeks

30
Joint drainage surgical options
  • medical aspiration, surgical aspiration via
    arthroscopy or open arthrotomy
  • Suspected hip sepsis early orthopaedic referral
    may need urgent open debridement

31
Recommendations specific to 1o care emergency
department
  • commonest hot joint to present in 1o care is 1st
    MTP gout
  • usually diagnosed on clinical grounds without
    needle aspiration or referral to hospital. (Make
    referral if inadequate recovery)
  • Some GPs aspirate inject joints for
    inflammatory arthritis or osteoarthritis. If
    withdraw pus/unexpected cloudy fluid should send
    sample with patient to local emergency department

32
Recommendations specific to 1o care emergency
department
  • GPs doctors in EAU should refer patients with
    suspected septic arthritis to specialist with
    expertise to aspirate joint. May be orthopaedic
    surgeon or rheumatologist
  • Admit if sepsis is suspected or confirmed.

33
Summary
  • with a short history of a hot, swollen, tender
    joint (or joints) plus restriction of movement
    septic arthritis until proven otherwise
  • If clinical suspicion high investigate treat as
    septic arthritis even in absence of fever

34
  • THANK-YOU
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