Title: Rheumatoid Arthritis
1- Rheumatoid Arthritis
- Systemic chronic inflammatory disease
- Mainly affects synovial joints
- Variable expression
- Prevalence about 3
- Worldwide distribution
- Femalemale ratio 31
- Peak age of onset 25-50 years
2Rheumatoid Arthritis
- Unknown etiology
- Genetics
- Environmental
- Possible infectious component
- Autoimmune disorder
3- THE PATHOLOGY OF RA
- Serositis
- 1. Synovitis
- Joints
- Tendon sheaths
- Bursae
- Nodules
- Vasculitis
-
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5RA Is Characterised by Synovitis and Joint
Destruction
NORMAL
RA
Inflamed synovial membrane
Synovial membrane
- Major cell types
- T lymphocytes
- macrophages
Pannus
Cartilage
- Minor cell types
- fibroblasts
- plasma cells
- endothelium
- dendritic cells
Synovial fluid
- Major cell type
- neutrophils
Capsule
Cartilage thinning
Adapted from Feldmann M, et al. Annu Rev Immunol.
199614397-440.
6Numerous Cellular Interactions Drive the RA
Process
Immune complexes Bacterial products IL-1, TNF-?,
etc
Rheumatoid factors
B cell
IL-1
Soluble factors and direct cellcell contact
T cell
HLA
-DR
Antigen- presenting cells
Macrophage
B cell or macrophage
IL-1 and TNF-?
Synoviocytes
Chondrocytes
Pannus
Articular cartilage
Production of collagenase and other neutral
proteases
Arend W. Semin Arthritis Rheum. 200130(suppl
2)1-6.
7IL-1 and TNF-? Have a Number of Overlapping
Proinflammatory Effects
Proinflammatory effects of IL-1
Proinflammatory effects of TNF-?
?COX-2?PGE2?NO?Adhesion molecules?Chemokines?
Collagenases?IL-6
?TNF-??Osteoclast activation ?Angiogenic
factors
?IL-1 ?cell death
COX-2 cyclo-oxygenase type 2 PGE2
prostaglandin-E2 NO nitric oxide
8IL-1 Plays a Pivotal Role in the Inflammatory and
Destructive Processes of RA
IL-1
Activates monocytes/macrophages
Activates chondrocytes
Induces fibroblast proliferation
Activates osteoclasts
Inflammation
Synovial pannus formation
Cartilage breakdown
Bone resorption
9Signs and Symptoms
- Joint inflammation
- Tender, warm swollen joints
- Symmetrical pattern
- Pain and stiffness
- Symptoms in other parts of the body
- Nodules
- Anemia
- Fatigue, occasional fever, malaise
10- JOINT INVOLVEMENT ON PRESENTATION OF RA
- Polyarticular 75 Monoarticular
25 - Small joints Knee
50 - of hands and feet 60
- Large joints 30 Shoulder
-
Wrist - Large and Hip
50 - Small joints 10 Ankle
-
Elbow -
11- Articular features seen in the Rheumatoid Hand
- WRIST PIPs
- Synovitis Synovitis
- Prominent ulnar styloid Fixed flexion or
extension - Subluxation and collapse of deformities
- carpus (Swan neck or boutonniere
- Radial deviation deformity)
- MCPs THUMBS
- Synovitis Synovitis
- Ulnar deviation Z deformity
- Subluxation
-
-
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15Joint Destruction
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17Extra-articular manifestations
- General
- fever, lymphadenopathy, weight loss, fatigue
- Dermatologic
- palmar erythema, nodules, vasculitis
- Ocular
- episcleritis/scleritis, scleromalacia perforans,
choroid and retinal nodules
18Extra-articular manifestations
- Cardiac
- pericarditis, myocarditis, coronary vasculitis,
nodules on valves - Neuromuscular
- entrapment neuropathy, peripheral neuropathy,
mononeuritis multiplex - Hematologic
- Feltys syndrome, large granular lymphocyte
syndrome, lymphomas
19Extra-articular manifestations
- Pulmonary
- pleuritis, nodules, interstitial lung disease,
bronchiolitis obliterans, arteritis, effusions - Others
- Sjogrens syndrome, amyloidosis
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26Investigations
- Hematology CBC , ESR
- Biochemistry LFT , Renal profile
- Serology RF , Anti-CCP
- Radiography Joints , Spines ,Chest
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28Treatment Goals
- Relieve pain
- Reduce inflammation
- Prevent/slow joint damage
- Improve functioning and quality of life
29Treatment Approaches
- Lifestyle modifications
- Rest
- Physical and occupational therapy
- Medications
- Surgery
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31 Rationale for the Early Treatment of
R.A. Erosions develop early in the disease
course Destruction is irreversible Disease
activity is strongly associated with joint
destruction later in the disease course Early
treatment can slow down radiographic
progress Disease activity must be suppressed
maximally in its early stages to prevent
destruction and preserve function
32Drug Treatments
- Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs)
- Disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs)
- Biologic response modifiers
- Corticosteroids
33Nonsteroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs (NSAIDs)
- COX-2 Inhibitors
- Celecoxib
- Rofecoxib
- Traditional NSAIDs
- Aspirin
- Ibuprofen
- Ketoprofen
- Naproxen
34Nonsteroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs (NSAIDs)
- To relieve pain and inflammation
- Use in combination with a DMARD
- Gastrointestinal side effects
35Disease-Modifying Antirheumatic Drugs (DMARDs)
- Sulfasalazine
- Methotrexate
- Leflunomide
- Gold
- Azathioprine
36Disease-Modifying Antirheumatic Drugs (DMARDs)
- Control symptoms
- No immediate analgesic effects
- Can delay progression of the disease
(prevent/slow joint and cartilage damage and
destruction) - Effects generally not seen until a few weeks to
months
37DMARDs
- hydroxychloroquine
- mild non-erosive disease
- combinations
- 200 mg bid
- eye exams
38DMARDs
- Sulfasalazine
- 1 gm bid - tid
- CBC, LFTs
- onset 1 - 2 months
- Methotrexate
- most commonly used drug
- fast acting (4-6 weeks)
- po, SQ - weekly
- CBC, LFTs
39DMARDs
- IM Gold
- slow onset (3-6 months)
- weekly then monthly injections
- CBC, UA before each injection
- Oral Gold
- less effective
- slow acting (4-6 months)
- daily
- CBC, UA
40Biologic Response Modifiers
- Etanercept
- Infliximab
- Anakinra
41Biologic Response Modifiers
- Etanercept and infliximab target tumor necrosis
factor alpha (TNF-?) - Anakinra targets interleukin-1 receptor
42OSTEOARTHRITIS
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45- MULTIFACTORAL ETIOLOGY OF OA
- ? Joint instability
- ? Age
- ? Hormonal factors
- ? Trauma
- ? Altered biochemistry
- ? Inflammation
- ? Genetic predisposition
- ? ? Others
46- SYMPTOMS AND SIGNS OF OA
- Pain worse on use of joint
- Stiffness mild after immobility
- Loss of movement
- Pain on movement/restricted range
- Tenderness (articular or periarticular)
- Bony swelling
- Soft tissue swelling
- Joint crepitus
47- RADIOLOGICAL FEATURES OF OA
- Narrowing of joint space
- Osteophytosis
- Altered bone contour
- Bone sclerosis and cysts
- Periarticular calcification
- Soft-tissue swelling
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53MANAGEMENT OF OSTEOARTHTITIS
- Confirm diagnosis
- Initial Therapy
-
- Pysiotherapy
- Wt loss
- Local therapy
- Paracetamol
54MANAGEMENT OF OSTEOARTHTITIScont
- Second-line approach
- NSAIDS
- Intra-articular therapy
steroids,hyalurinate - Opioids
- ?glucosamines
- Arthroscopy
- Surgery
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