Title: Approach to the patient with monoarticular pain
1Approach to the patient with monoarticular pain
- Caroline Gordon
- Department of Rheumatology
- City Hospital and
- University of Birmingham
2Assessment of joint pain
- Site (distribution)
- Type
- Associated features
- Duration and onset
- Risk factors
- Physical signs
- Differential diagnosis
3Structures associated with a joint
4Site of pain
- Patient complains of pain in the knee
- Is pain coming from the joint arthritis
- Is pain from the surrounding tissues
- tendonitis, enthesitis, bursitis
- or bone pain
- Is there pain in other joints?
5Site and distribution of pain
- Is it joint, peri-articular or muscle pain?
- Which joint is involved?
Achilles tendonitis
6What type of joint pain?
- Is it inflammatory?
-
- Is it mechanical or degenerative?
- Pain worse at rest
- and improved by exercise
- Pain worse on exercise
- and improved by rest
7Other inflammatory features?
- Early morning stiffness?
- Redness?
- Warmth?
- Tenderness?
- Swelling?
8Duration and onset
- Is it acute or chronic?
- What were circumstances of onset?
- Is it getting rapidly or slowly worse?
- Have there been any previous episodes?
9Differential diagnosis
- Acute Inflammatory
- Septic arthritis
- Crystal arthritis
- Haemarthrosis
- Other
- Chronic
- TB arthritis
- Acute non-inflammatory
- usually trauma related
- cartilage or ligamentous
- aseptic necrosis
- Chronic
- Osteoarthritis
10Systemic features?
- Fever
- Malaise
- Weight loss
- Loss of appetite
- Infections- skin, respiratory, urinary etc
11Past medical history- risk factors
- Predisposition to infection?
- Associations with gout/other crystals
- Recent infection
- Joint replacement
- Diabetes mellitus
- Chronic systemic disease/malignancy
- Dehydration
- Renal failure
- Hypertension
- Hypercholesterolaemia
12Other risk factors
- Family history of
- gout
- haemophilia or other bleeding disorder
- Social history of
- alcoholism
- drug abuse
13Treatment history
- Risks for sepsis
- Corticosteroids
- Cytotoxic drugs
- IV drug use/abuse
- Risks for gout
- Diuretics
- Nephrotoxic drugs
- Risks for haemarthrosis
- anticoagulation
14Clinical features of inflammatory monoarthritis
- Fever
- Erythema
- Local pain and tenderness
- Inflammatory signs
- Impaired function
- Signs of infection
- Petechiae or purpura
- Gouty tophi
15Gouty tophi
16Differential diagnosis of monoarthritis
- Inflammatory
- septic arthritis
- crystal arthritis eg gout, pseudogout (CPPD)
- haemarthrosis (bleed)
- Non-inflammatory
- osteoarthritis
17Features suggesting infection
- Fever
- Lymph nodes
- Erythema and heat
- One joint flare in RA
- One or few joints-sequential/additive
- Other risk factors
18Tuberculous infection
- Indolent
- Mild fever
- Rarely warmth/redness
- Some tenderness/swelling
- Usually monoarthritis
- Chest often normal
- Mantoux positive
19Investigations in acute monoarthritis
- FBC (WC diff) , ESR or viscosity or CRP
- Renal function urate
- Blood cultures
- Synovial fluid
- Swabs, urine, stool
- X-rays
20Synovial fluid analysis
- Infection or crystals ? (or blood ?)
- Cell count and differential
- Gram stain /- Ziel-Nielsen stain
- Culture for bacteria including TB
- Polarised light microscopy for crystals
21Aspirate after correcting clotting if necessary
22Synovial fluid analysis
- Macroscopic
- Cells
- Chemistry
- turbid
- not viscous
- poor mucin clot
- increased gt50,000/mm3
- gt90 neutrophils
- low glucose in infection
23Aspirate to distinguish infection from crystals
24Septic arthritis due to Staph. aureus
25X-ray changes in infection
- Soft tissue swelling
- Joint space narrowing
- No reactive osteopenia or sclerosis early
- Destruction and flattening of weight-bearing
surfaces (eg hip) - Diffuse loss of cortex not discrete erosion
- Late sclerosis/fusion
26X-ray change in infection
27Crystal arthritis
- GOUT
- urate crystals
- Middle aged males
- Post-menopausal female
- Peripheral small joints
- Medium sized joints less
- PSEUDOGOUT (CPPD)
- calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate
- Elderly females gt males
- Medium large joints most
- May be associated with OA
28Gout
Usually monoarticular at onset
29Uric acid crystals
30X-rays in gout
31Severe tophaceous gout
32PseudogoutCalcium pyrophosphate arthropathy
33CPPD arthropathyoften associated with
osteoarthritis
34Aspirate to distinguish infection from crystals
35Calcium pyrophosphate crystals
36Chondrocalcinosisassociated with CPPD arthritis
37Chondrocalcinosis in the triangular ligament
38Treatment of acute inflammatory monoarthritis
- Reverse anticoagulation if appropriate
- Aspiration/drainage
- Antibiotics- parenteral then oral if septic
- NSAIDs, other analgesia
- Rest
- Physiotherapy
- Other therapy if crystals confirmed
39Treatment of septic arthritis
- Antibiotics
- Staph aureus
- Strep/H. infl
- Gram negative
- Penicillin allergic
- Flucloxacillin
- Sodium fucidate
- Vancomycin
- Amoxicillin
- Gentamycin
- Cefuroxime
- Erythromycin
40Type of pain associated features of inflammation
- Is it inflammatory?
- What makes the pain worse/better?
- Is there morning stiffness/gelling?
- Has there been any swelling?
- Is the joint tender to touch?
- Has the joint been red or warm?
41Acute inflammatory monoarthritis
- Infection-acute/chronic
- Crystals-gout/CPPD
- Trauma
- Bleed (haemarthrosis-coagulopathy)
- Other inflammatory arthritis
- Tumour (very rare)
42Clinical features of osteoarthritis
- SYMPTOMS
- Use-related pain
- Mild am stiffness
- Inactivity gelling
- Loss of joint motion
- Instability
- Disability
- SIGNS
- Periarticular tenderness
- Bony swelling joint margin
- Cool effusions
- Coarse crepitus
- Restricted painful movement
- Instability
43Osteoarthritis monoarticular or polyarticular
44Osteoarthritis (OA)
- Joint failure
- Dysregulation of normal tissue turnover repair
- Extremely common age-related disorder
- Major cause of disability inability to work
gt50yrs
45Pathological features of OA
- Focal areas of destruction of articular cartilage
(fibrillation and erosion) - Hypertrophy of subchondral bone, joint margin
capsule (synovial metaplasia) - Pseudocysts
46Normal and OA joint
47Radiological changes of OA
- Joint space narrowing
- Subchondral bone sclerosis and cysts
- Marginal osteophyte formation
48Normal knee and osteoarthritis
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51Management of osteoarthritis
- Establish diagnosis
- Analgesia
- Education
- Exercise
- Walking stick etc
- Surgery
- clinical assessment
- X-rays
- blood tests
- paracetamol, codeine
- future expectations
- physio
- OT
- plan appropriate time