Title: Rheumatology Basics
1Rheumatology Basics
- Kalyani McCullough, MD
- Clinics and MOP Didactic
2Purpose of this talk
- To provide a foundation for
- Seeing patients in Rheumatology clinic
- Getting started on the work-up of suspected
rheumatologic diseases in your clinic - Review most common rheumatologic diseases
- Fast overview
- Resource for later
3Main diseases youll be seeing
- Inflammatory arthritis
- Rheumatoid, spondyloarthropathies
- Crystal arthritis
- Gout, Pseudogout
- Autoimmune disorders
- Lupus, Sclerodema, Autoimmune myositis
- Vasculitis
- Large, medium, small vessel
4What are some clues your patient may have a
rheumatologic disease?
- Constitutional symptoms
- Fevers, sweats, weight loss, fatigue
- Subacute time course
- Started over weeks to months
- Characteristic symptoms
- Mono or polyarticular joint pain, multisystem
complaints (i.e. skin, lung, GI) - Are there signs of an inflammatory process?
- Synovitis, rash, serositis, elevated ESR/CRP
5How do you get started on the work-up?
- Thorough physical exam
- Lab tests
- CBC w diff, ESR, CRP, ANA, targeted
autoantibodies - Radiographs
- Erosive arthritis, sacroillitis
- Biopsy?
- Skin, muscle, kidney
6Basics of treatment
- NSAIDs
- Symptom relief, especially joint pain
- Glucocorticoids
- Acutely, try to use steroid sparing agent if
possible - Disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs)
- Synthetic DMARDs
- Slow onset, 2-6 months
- Methotrexate, Hydroxychloroquine, Sulfasalazine,
Azathioprine, Mycophenolate mofetil,
Cyclophosphamide - Biologic DMARDs
- Bioengineered protein drugs (antibodies or
receptor-antibody chimeras ) - IV or SQ only
- Rapid onset
- Screen for and treat LTBI, HBV first
- Infliximab, Etancercept, Rituximab
7Steroid Side Effects
- Weight gain
- Diabetes
- Cataracts
- Insomnia
- Fluid retention
- Hypertension
- Proximal weakness
- Alopecia
- Sweats
- Osteoporosis
- Infection
- Psychiatric disturbance (eg, depression, mania,
psychosis) - Easy bruising of the skin
- Stress
- Tremor
- Peptic ulcer disease
8Long term considerations for most autoimmune
diseases
- Increased risk of CV death due to inflammation
and accelerated atherosclerosis - Aggressive risk factor reduction BPlt120/80,
LDLlt100 - Osteoporosis from glucocorticoids
- Dexa screening, Calcium-Vit D, bisphosphonates
prn - Infections
- Increased risk of certain malignancies
- Lymphoma, Lung/Cervical CA in Lupus
9Inflammatory Arthritis
- Rheumatoid arthritis
- Spondyloarthropathies
- Axial skeletal involvement and polyarthritis of
peripheral joints - Ankylosing spondylitis
- Reactive arthritis
- Psoriatic arthritis
- IBD-associated arthritis
10Rheumatoid arthritis
- Clinical presentation
- Chronic, symmetric polyarthritis
- Often starts with the PIPs, MCPs, MTPs
- Can affect most synovial joints (wrists, knees,
elbows etc.) - Doesnt affect DIPs
- Morning stiffness, pain, swelling (vs. OA worse
with activity) - Labs
- RF, anti-CCP Ab or both in 70 of patients
- RF not specific, anti-CCP 90-98 specific
- ACD, ESR, CRP
- Xrays
- articular erosions and joint space narrowing
11Joint distribution in RA vs. OA
12RA Physical Exam Findings
- Ulnar deviation
- at mcps
- Swan neck deformity
- hyperextension of PIPs, flexion of DIPs
- Boutonniere deformity
- flexion of PIP, hyperextension of DIP
13OA Physical Exam Findings
Bony outgrowths/ calcific spurs on PIPs and DIPs
14RA Extra-articular Manifestations
- Many extra-articular findings
- Rheumatoid nodules
- Other organ involvement
- Sjogrens syndrome
- Scleritis
- Interstitial fibrosis
- Pericardial effusions
- Peripheral neuropathy
- Amyloidosis
15RA - Treatment
- Early aggressive treatment leads to better
longterm outcomes - Glucocorticoids acutely
- MTX frequently used
- Start 7.5mg weekly, increase to a max dose of
20-25mg weekly - Give with folate 1mg daily to reduce toxicity
- Check CBC, AST/ALT, Cr q 3 mo
- Contraindications liver disease, HBV/HCV,
alcohol use, CrCllt30 - Toxicities oral ulcers, nausea, hepatotoxicity,
BMS, pneumonitis
16Sponydloarthropathies
- Inflammatory arthritis with involvement of
- Sacroiliac (SI) joint
- Axial spine
- Tendon fascia
- Ligament insertion points (entheses)
- Peripheral joints
17Spondyloarthropathies
- Ankylosing Spondylitis
- Psoriatic Arthritis
- DIPs often involved, assoc with nail pitting
- Reactive Arthritis
- Triggered by GI/GU infection
- IBD-associated arthritis
- Correlates with bowel activity
18Ankylosing Spondylitis
- Clinical presentation
- Inflammatory back pain in young adult
- Reduction in spinal mobility, particularly lumbar
flexion - Association with anterior uveitis
- Labs
- Increased relative risk of HLA-B27
- Xray
- - Sacroiliitis
- Treatment
- - PT, NSAIDs
19Crystal Arthritis
- Gout Natural History
- 1) Asymptomatic hyperuricemia
- Over production or under excretion (or both)
- 2) Acute and intermittent gout
- Attacks triggered by fluctuations in UA level (up
or down) and deposition of UA crystals in joint - Acute monoarthritis, often 1st attack is at 1st
mtp - After years see bony erosions on xray
- 3) Chronic tophaceous gout
20Gout - Treatment
- Acute attack most efficacious if initiate
treatment within 48h of onset - NSAIDs indomethacin
- Avoid if h/o PUD or renal impairment
- Colchisine
- 1.2mg PO x 1, then 0.6mg 1h later and q24h until
symptoms improve - Side effects Diarrhea, abdominal pain, NSAIDs
better tolerated - Reduce dose if Cr gt 1.5, risk of neuromuscular
toxicity - Glucocorticoids
- Prednisone 20-40mg/d, taper 1-2 wks after
symptoms resolve
21Gout - Prophylaxis
- Goal UAlt6
- Xanthine oxidase inhibitors (decrease production)
- Allopurinol
- Start with 100mg daily, gradually increase dose
- Max is 800mg/d, though 300-400mg usually
effective - Reduce dose if diminished Cr
- Hypersensitivity reaction can be fatal, more
common in older patients with impaired Cr on
diuretics - If develop rash, stop
- Febuxostat
- Metabolized by liver, so better with renal
impairment - Ok with mild-moderate hepatic insufficiency
- Uricosuric agents (increase excretion)
- Probenacid
- Age lt65, good renal function, not on more than
ASA 81 daily - Side effects rash and GI symptoms
22Pseudogout
- Clinical presentation
- Intermittent monoarthritis, often knee/wrist,
though can be 1st mtp - Labs
- rhomboid shaped, positively birefringent calcium
pyrophosphate dihydrate (CPPD) crystals - Can be associated with other diseases
hemochromatosis, thyroid disease - Treatment
- NSAIDs, colchisine
23Autoimmune disorders
- Systemic lupus erythematosis (SLE)
- Antiphospholipid antibody syndrome
- Raynauds phenomenon
- Scleroderma
- Sjogrens Disease
- Dermatomyositis and Polymyositis
- Relapsing Polychondritis
24Lupus
- Clinical presentation
- Typically affects women of childbearing age
- Multisystem relapsing/remitting disease
- Affects skin, musculoskeletal, renal, CV,
pulmonary, GI, CNS, psych
- Hallmark symptoms photosensitive rash,
polyarthritis, serositis, fatigue - Renal and
CNS involvement -gt significant morbidity
25Lupus
- Labs
- Presence of antinuclear antibodies
- Once ANA positive, no need to recheck
- Anti-dsDNA and anti-Sm have great specificity,
but lack sensitivity. - Hypocomplementemia may occur during flares.
- C3, C4, CH50
- Treatment
- Glucocorticoids, DMARDs
26Lupus - Monitoring
- Lupus nephritis approx 50
- Typically immune complex glomerulonephritis
- Screen q3 mo
- Ask about polyuria, nocturia, foamy urine
- Look for HTN and edema
- Labs UA RBC casts, spot prot Cr ratio
- Diagnose with biopsy
- Increased risk of malignancy Hodkins and
Non-Hodgkins lymphoma, Lung CA, Cervical CA - Annual cervical CA screening
27Scleroderma
- Clinical presentation
- Early in disease
- msk pain, fatigue, weight loss, GERD
- Rare disorder, but symptoms common in primary
care - Late in disease
- Skin thickening, ischemic digital ulcers,
pitting, telangectasias on face and palms - Lungs interstitial fibrosis, pulmonary htn
- GI GERD, dysphagia
- Renal rare, but Scleroderma Renal Crisis (SRC)
is life threatening emergency - Cardiac ischemic injury
- MSK erosive arthritis, tendon friction rub
- CREST (limited scleroderma) calcinosis,
raynauds, esophageal dysmotility, sclerodactyly,
telangectasias
28Scleroderma
Thickened, tight skin
Digital ulcers
Sclerodactyly
Telangectasias
29Scleroderma
- Labs
- If negative ANA, diagnosis is very unlikely
- Indirect immunofluorescence better than ELISA
- Anti-centromere Ab in 20-40
- Anti-Scl-70 (anti-topoisomerase) 20-40
- Correlates with worse prognosis
- Treatment
- No proven disease-modifying medication
- Screening and early identification of internal
organ involvement important - Organ specific treatment
- Fibrosis immunosuppresion
- Renal crisis ACEi
- GERD PPI and behavioral change
30Autoimmune myositis
- Polymyositis (PM)
- Dermatomyositis
- Dermatomyositis sine myositis (just skin)
- Dermatomyositis sine dermatitis (classic muscle
biopsy findings) - Immune-mediated necrotizing myopathy (IMNM)
- Statin exposure
31Autoimmune myositis
- Clinical presentation
- Symmetric, proximal muscle weakness that develops
over weeks to months - Difficulty rising from a chair, walking up steps,
washing or brushing hair - If severe dysphagia and respiratory distress
from weakness of neck, pharyngeal and
diapghragmatic muscles - Distal weakness very uncommon, suspect another
diagnosis
32Dermatomyositis
- Clinical Presentation Skin
- Gottron papules raised violaceous lesions at
extensor surfaces of mcp, pip, dip - Gottron sign erythematous rash at above sites
- Heliotrope rash red/purplish discoloration of
eyelids
33Dermatomyositis
- Shawl sign erythematous rash across posterior
neck and shoulders - V sign erythematous rash on anterior neck and
chest - Mechanics hands/feet hyperkeratotic skin
thickening, often with painful cracking
34Autoimmune myositis
- Labs
- Elevated CK, aldolase, AST, ALT, LD from damaged
muscle cells - Auto antibodies (anti-Jo-1, anti PL-7)
- ANA positive in gt50
- Antisynthetase syndrome in dermatomysoitis also
with ILD, arthritis, fevers, raynauds - MRI muscle edema, fascial inflammation
- EMG irritable myopathy
- Muscle biopsy generally nonspecific findings,
but rules out non-autoimmune myopathies - DM perifascicular atrophy is specific
35Autoimmune myositis
- Treatment
- Glucocorticoids to control acute disease
- Taper to lowest effective dose
- Steroid sparing agent MTX, azathioprine
- Exercise especially isometric, avoid heavy
weight lifting
36Autoimmune myositis vs. PMR
- Polymyalgia Rheumatica (PMR)
- aching and stiffness of neck, shoulders, hips
(vs. weakness) - Elevated ESR gt40
- Age gt50
- Rapid response to prednisone 20mg/d or less
- Association with GCA, but can occur independently
too
37Mixed Connective Tissue Disease
- Overlap syndrome with features of SLE,
Scleroderma and Polymyositis - Characteristic clinical symptoms
- Raynaud phenomenon, hand edema, synovitis,
inflammatory muscle disease, sclerodactyly - High titers of anti-U1 RNP autoantibody
38Vasculitis
- Inflammatory destruction of blood vessels
- Occlusion, rupture, thrombus can lead to tissue
ischemia - Vary in severity and presentation based on
vessels affected
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40Vasculitis
- Clinical presentation
- Constitutional symptoms
- Subacute
- Signs of inflammation
- Multisystem disease
- i.e. Mononeuritis multiplex
- Distinct/named peripheral nerves infarcted one at
a time - Due to vasculitis of vasa nervorum leading to
ischemia - Hallmarks are asynchrony and asymmetry
- Labs
- Diagnose with biopsy
- Treatment
- Disease specific, often immunosuppressive therapy
41In Summary
- Suspect a rheumatologic process in patients with
subacute onset of constitutional symptoms, signs
of inflammation and multi system involvement - Get work-up started with thorough PE, targeted
labs and xrays - Consult with Rheum and consider getting
prednisone started to control acute disease, with
a goal of tapering to the lowest effective dose
when possible - Monitor for the longterm complications of
autoimmune disease
42Questions?