Inflammatory arthritis and Autoimmunity
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Transcript Inflammatory arthritis and Autoimmunity
Inflammatory Arthritis and
Autoimmunity
Sunil Abraham, MD
Ellis Rheumatology Associates
No disclosures
Classification
Septic
Infectious
Osteomyelitis
Monosodium urate
Crystalline
Calcium pyrophosphate
Arthritis
Rheumatoid
Inflammatory
Autoimmune
Seronegative (HLA-B27)
ANA related
Polymyalgia rheumatica
Vasculitis, Sarcoid, Misc
Non-Inflammatory
Osteoarthrosis
Case presentations
Case #1
46 year old white female with 4 month history of
progressive fatigue associated with worsening
joint pains
In the morning her knees are very stiff (1 hour)
and her first few steps out of bed are very painful
She has noticed MCP swelling and that her rings
are getting tighter
There is numbness and tingling in her fingertips
ROS negative
Case #2
28 year old male presents with a 5 year history of
recurring bilateral ankle pain and swelling. It is
associated with extreme morning stiffness. He
denies any back pain. He has nail pitting
His brother recently developed a rash on his
elbows
MRI of the of right ankle showed significant
tendon swelling and subcortical erosions
Case # 3
82 year white female with history of diabetes,
hypertension and coronary disease presents with
2 month history of progressive fatigue, malaise
and stiffness in her hips and shoulders
She has never taken an hmg coa reductase
inhibitor
Review of systems is negative
Sedimentation rate is normal
Case # 4
An 87 year old white female presents to your
office with acute right dorsal wrist swelling,
redness, warmth and pain that has been present
for 3 weeks
No constitutional symptoms are present
Two courses of antibiotics provide no relief
Xray of her wrist shows chondrocalcinosis of the
TFCC; ESR is 90
Inflammatory Arthritis
• Infiltration of synovial
capsule and surrounding joint
capsule with lymphocytes,
neutrophils, and macrophages
• Cardinal signs of
inflammation:
– Rubor, Calor, Tumor,
Dolor
• Potential for joint disruption
and destruction
Acute Inflammatory arthritis
Abrupt onset (hours to days)
Hot, red, swollen, exquisitely tender joint
Constitutional symptoms (fevers, chills, sweats)
Mono-, oligo-, poly- articular
Acute Inflammatory arthritis
Differential
Infectious
Bacterial, mycobacterial, fungal
Opportunistic
Lyme (3rd stage)
Crystalline
Monosodium urate- ‘Gout’
Calcium pyrophosphate- ‘Pseudogout‘
Acute Inflammatory arthritis
Rule out mechanical/traumatic injury
Olecranon bursitis, rotator cuff/ achilles
tendonitis
Fracture
Chronic inflammatory arthritis
Progressive, insidious (>6 weeks)
Morning stiffness > 1 hour
Additional signs of inflammation
Fatigue, malaise, anhedonia
Weight loss, anorexia
‘Flu like’
Chronic inflammatory arthritis
Extra-articular manifestations
Rash (psoriatic, erythema nodosum)
Urethritis or sexually transmitted disease
History of bowel infection (salmonella, shigella)
Inflammatory bowel disease (colitis)
Uveitis
Sicca
Connective tissue disease
Disorder with collagen and elastin
Supporting structures
Non-heritable (genetics/environmental)
Rheumatoid arthritis
Systemic lupus erythematosus
Sjogrens Syndrome
Polymyositis, Scleroderma
Heritable
Osteogenesis imperfecta, Marfans, Ehlers-Danlos
Connective tissue disease
Review of systems
Signs of inflammation
Arthritis
Patchy alopecia
Oral/nasal ulcerations
Raynauds
Xerophthalmia/ Xerostomia
Rash (distribution, photosensitive)
Proximal muscle weakness
Connective tissue diseases
Rheumatoid Arthritis
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
Sjogrens Syndrome
Systemic Scleroderma
Polymyositis/ Dermatomyositis
Mixed Connective Tissue Disease
Labs for Autoimmunity
ACR Position Statement
Immunofluorescence testing is the gold standard
for ANA testing
HEp-2 cells have multiple autoantigens (>100)
Need to have results reported with titer and
pattern
Current technology employs ELISA and
multiplex technologies
Allows processing of large volumes
Limits diagnostic accuracy
8-10 autoantigens
Conditions with positive ANA
Essential for diagnosis
SLE
Systemic sclerosis
Mixed connective tissue disease
Somewhat useful
Poly-, Dermatomyositis
Sjogrens
Other conditions with +ANA
Autoimmune hepatitis/thyroid disease
Multiple sclerosis
Malignancy
Age
Infection
ANA pearls
Not a screening test
Is there a high pre-test likelihood:
SLE
Scleroderma
Sjogrens
Autoimmune myopathy
Obtain results in titer and pattern
Consider other causes for positivity
Related Autoantibodies
RA
MCTD
SLE
Sjogrens
RNP
SSA/B
dsDNA
PM/DM
Scl
Jo-1
Smith
Scl-70
RF CCP
“ANAnegative”
Centromere
Seronegative Arthritis
Associated conditions:
Psoriatic arthritis
Ankylosing spondylitis
Reactive arthritis
Enteropathic related
Undifferentiated spondyloarthropathy
HLA-B27
Not useful as a diagnostic test
Presence in 6% of normal population
Polymyalgia Rheumatica
?Autoimmune inflammatory condition
Periarthritis
Subdeltoid bursitis, glenohumeral synovitis, biceps
tenosynovitis
Consider diagnosis is those >50 years old, especially >70
~15% association with Giant Cell Arteritis
Check ESR, CRP, SPEP
Exquisitely responsive to glucocorticoids
1-2 years with slow taper
Crystalline Arthritis
Monosodium urate deposition (Gout)
Affects 1st MTP, knees, wrist
Destructive
Consider in post menopausal women
Gold standard diagnosis is by joint fluid analysis
Goal uric acid <6
Calcium pyrophosphate deposition (Pseudogout)
Disruption of cartilage calcification
Senior population
Cases Revisited
Case #1
46 year old white female with 4 month history of
progressive fatigue associated with worsening
joint pains
In the morning her knees are very stiff (1 hour)
and her first few steps out of bed are very painful
She has noticed MCP swelling and that her rings
are getting tighter
There is numbness and tingling in her fingertips
Case #2
28 year old male presents with a 5 year history of
recurring bilateral ankle pain and swelling. It is
associated with extreme morning stiffness. He
denies any back pain. He has nail pitting
His brother recently developed a rash on his
elbows
MRI of the of right ankle showed significant
tendon swelling and subcortical erosions
Case # 3
82 year white female with history of diabetes,
hypertension and coronary disease presents with
2 month history of progressive fatigue, malaise
and stiffness in her hips and shoulders
She has never taken an hmg coa reductase
inhibitor
Review of systems is negative.
Sedimentation rate is normal
Case # 4
An 87 year old white female presents to your
office with subacute right dorsal wrist swelling,
redness, warmth and pain that has been present
for 3 weeks
No constitutional symptoms are present
Two courses of antibiotics provide no relief
Xray of her wrist shows chondrocalcinosis of the
TFCC; ESR is 90; Uric acid 5.4
Conclusions
Appreciate the spectrum of inflammatory arthritis and its
relation to connective tissue diseases
Understand the importance of patient demographics in
narrowing your differential
Before ordering an ANA, consider whether the patient truly
has a connective tissue disease
Always make sure ANA’s are ordered by IFA with titer and
pattern
Don’t forget about psoriatic arthritis and pseudogout!