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Title: Arthritis and Arthrocentesis


1
Arthritis and Arthrocentesis
  • Joe Lex, MD, FAAEM
  • Temple University Hospital
  • joe_at_joelex.net

2
(No Transcript)
3
Not About Trauma
4
(No Transcript)
5
Whats a joint like you doing in a nice girl like
this??
6
Objectives
  • 1. Differentiate among the three types of joints
  • 2. Explain the pathology of joint inflammation
  • 3. Develop a differential for arthritis, based on
    number of joints involved, location, and other
    characteristics

Objectives
7
Objectives
  • 4. Explain usefulness of various synovial fluid
    studies.
  • 5. Demonstrate an appropriate technique for large
    joint arthrocentesis
  • 6. Explain the pathophysiology and treatment for
    gout

Objectives
8
Objectives
  • 7. Differentiate rheumatic fever from
    rheumatoid arthritis from rheumatism
  • 8. Be aware of quackery as it applies to
    treatment of arthritis

Objectives
9
History of Arthritides
  • 1680s Sydenham describes gout, rheumatism,
    chorea
  • 1808 term rheumatic fever
  • 1876 urate crystals postulated to cause gout
  • 1883 gonococcal arthritis
  • 1907 osteoarthritis described

History
10
Thomas Sydenham (1624-1689)
History
11
Three Joint Types
  • Synarthroses suture lines of skull
  • Amphiarthroses fibrocartilaginous unions of
    pubic symphysis and lower third of sacroiliac
    joint
  • Diarthroses Synovial most other joints

Types
12
Synarthosis
13
Amphiarthroses
14
Diarthrosis Synovial Joints
  • Subchondral bone, convex against concave, covered
    by cartilage
  • Cartilage collagen proteoglycan
  • Lubricated, slide on each other
  • Surrounded by capsule supported by ligaments,
    tendons, and muscle
  • Lined with synovial membrane

Types
15
Typical Joint Structure
Structure
16
Pathophysiology
  • Joint trauma causes decreased proteoglycans
  • If trauma persistent, damage irreparable
  • Inflammation characterized by polymorphonuclear
    white cells
  • May be immunologic (rheumatoid, Reiters)

Path
17
Joint vs. Periarticular
  • Arthritis
  • Generalized pain, warmth, swelling, tenderness
  • Discomfort ? with joint motion
  • Periarticular inflammation bursitis, tendinitis,
    localized cellulitis
  • Focal tenderness, swelling not uniform
  • Pain only with certain movements

Pearls
18
Monarticular vs. Polyarticular
Pearls
19
If Polyarticular and
  • symmetric rheumatoid, drug induced
  • asymmetric rubella, acute rheumatic fever,
    gonococcal
  • migratory gonococcal or rubella

Poly
20
Location, Location, Location
  • First MTP joint gout
  • MCP and PIP joints rheumatoid
  • DIP and first carpometacarpal joint
    osteoarthritis
  • Knee septic arthritis, pseudogout, gout

Location
21
Causes of Migratory Arthritis
  • Rheumatic fever
  • Subacute bacterial endocarditis
  • Henoch-Schönlein purpura
  • Cefaclor (Ceclor) hypersensitivity (kids)
  • Septicemia staphylococcal, streptococcal,
    meningococcal, gonococcal
  • Mycoplasma, histoplasmosis, coccidioidomycosis
  • Lyme disease

22
Arthritis with
  • low-grade fever ? any inflammatory arthritis
  • high fever, chills ? septic arthritis
  • kidney stones ? gout
  • genital ulcers ? Reiters disease
  • urethral discharge ? Reiters, gonococcus

Symptoms
23
Arthritis and
  • isoniazid, procainamide, hydralazine ? lupus
  • thiazide diuretics ? gout (increase serum uric
    acid level)
  • Chlorthalidone (Hygroton)
  • Hydrochlorothiazide (HydroDIURIL, Esidrix,
    Oretic)
  • Indapamide (Lozol)

Causes
24
Some Scalp and Skin Findings
25
Physical Exam
Exam
26
Physical Exam
  • Warmth and effusion
  • Synovial thickening
  • Deformity
  • Tenderness generalized or localized, articular
    or periarticular
  • Limited range of motion
  • Pain on movement

Exam
27
Lab Studies
  • Limited diagnostic value
  • Screening tests CBC, ESR
  • Bacterial usually elevated WBC
  • Chronic rheumatic mild anemia
  • ESR elevated in most inflammatory
  • RF, ANA, ASO titers, Lyme serologies for
    follow-up
  • Uric acid not helpful in gout

Labs
28
X-ray Findings (Chronic)
  • Soft tissue swelling
  • Erosions
  • Calcification
  • Osteoporosis
  • Narrowed joint space
  • Deformity
  • Separation (fractures)

Xray
29
X-ray Findings (Septic)
Xray
30
Hallmark X-ray Findings
Osteoarthritis Osteophytes
Xray
31
Hallmark X-ray Findings
Erosions Rheumatoid or Gout
Xray
32
Hallmark X-ray Findings
Chondrocalcinosis Pseudogout
Xray
33
Hallmark X-ray Findings
Enthesitis Insertion Site Inflammation
(HLA-B27)
Xray
34
Other Imaging
  • Ultrasound joint effusions tendons and
    ligaments of shoulder
  • CT scan SI, sternoclavicular joint
  • MRI knee cruciate ligaments
  • Contrast MRI differentiate synovitis from
    synovial fluid in rheumatoid disease

Image
35
Other Imaging
  • 99mtechnetium methylene diphosphonate (99mTc MDP)
  • Osteomyelitis, stress fractures
  • Gallium gathers at proliferation of serum
    proteins and leukocytes
  • Infection

Image
36
Arthrocentesis
  • Critical diagnostic adjunct
  • Can be painless, safe, and simple when performed
    correctly
  • Diagnostic or therapeutic

Tap
37
Indications
  • Obtain joint fluid for analysis
  • Drain tense hemarthroses
  • Instill analgesics and anti-inflammatory agents
  • Prosthetic joints only to rule out infection

Tap
38
Contraindications
  • Absolute infection of any kind covers area to be
    punctured
  • Relative
  • Bleeding diatheses, anticoagulant therapy
  • Bacteremia

Tap
39
Procedure
  • Cleanse skin with povidone-iodine, then air dry
  • Remove povidone-iodine with isopropyl alcohol
  • Intra-articular povidone-iodine can cause
    chemical irritation, inhibit bacterial growth
    leading to spuriously negative cultures in early
    septic joint

Tap
40
Procedure
  • Place sterile drapes
  • Inject local anesthetic into skin
  • 25- to 30-gauge needle
  • Intraarticular anesthetic can inhibit bacterial
    growth, cause spuriously negative culture in
    early septic joint

Tap
41
Procedure
  • Aspirate large joints with large-bore needle (18
    or 19 gauge)
  • Smaller joints smaller-bore needle
  • Choose syringe size based on anticipated fluid
    volume
  • Remove as much fluid as possible
  • Optimizes diagnosis
  • Relieves pain from distention

Tap
42
Arthrocentesis
  • Fat globules diagnostic of fracture
  • Intraarticular morphine can provide relief for up
    to 24 hours
  • 1 to 5 mg diluted in normal saline solution to a
    total volume of 30 ml

Tap
43
Sternoclavicular Joint
Tap
44
Sternoclavicular Joint
Tap
45
Acromioclavicular Joint
Tap
46
Shoulder Posterior Approach
Tap
47
Shoulder Anterior Approach
Tap
48
Elbow Lateral Approach
Flex elbow 90o Prep skin Insert needle in
palpable bony notch between lateral epicondyle
and olecranon
Tap
49
Elbow Lateral Approach
Tap
50
Elbow Posterior Approach
Tap
51
Wrist Approach
Tap
52
Wrist Approach
Tap
53
Wrist Approach
Tap
54
Intercarpal Approach
Tap
55
Knee Lateral Approach
Tap
56
Knee Lateral Approach
Extend knee, quadriceps and patella relaxed so
patella can move mediolaterally. Needle into
joint space just lateral to patella near its
upper pole, parallel to the posterior (articular)
surface.
Tap
57
Knee Lateral Approach
Tap
58
Knee Medial Approach
Tap
59
Knee Medial Approach
Tap
60
Knee Medial Approach
Tap
61
Knee Medial Approach
Tap
62
Knee Medial Approach
Tap
63
Knee Medial vs. Lateral
  • Follow Suttons Law
  • William Slick Willie Sutton (1901 1980)
    professional bank robber

Tap
64
Ankle
Palpate the medial and lateral malleoli with your
thumb and index finger. The joint space is
located one to one and a half cm above the line
joining the tips of the malleoli.
Tap
65
Ankle
Palpate the dorsalis pedis artery and choose a
puncture site anywhere on the anterior aspect of
the ankle, avoiding the dorsalis pedis artery.
Tap
66
Ankle Lateral Approach
Tap
67
Ankle Medial Approach
Tap
68
Subtalar Joint
Tap
69
Synovial Fluid Analysis
  • Identify crystals, pus
  • Analyze color, clarity, cell count, differential,
    Grams stain, crystals
  • Positive Grams stain diagnostic for septic
    arthritis
  • Negative Grams stain does not rule out septic
    arthritis

Fluid
70
Synovial Fluid Cell Count
  • Noninflammatory vs. inflammatory
  • ED wet mount prep
  • 1 to 2 WBCs per high-power field consistent with
    noninflammatory
  • gt20 WBC/HPF suggests inflammation or infection
  • Septic gt50,000 WBC/mm3 (also rheumatoid, gout,
    pseudogout)

Fluid
71
Synovial Fluid Analysis
72
Other Synovial Fluid Analysis
  • Glucose, lactic acid, viscosity, mucin clot, and
    total protein limited utility, not recommended
  • Appropriate container
  • Cellular analysis lavender (ethylenediaminetetraa
    cetic acid)
  • Crystal analysis green (heparin)
  • Chemical analysis, serology red

Fluid
73
Crystal Studies
  • Monosodium urate needle shaped, birefringent
    negative
  • Parallel to compensator yellow
  • Perpendicular blue
  • Calcium pyrophosphate polymorphic, birefringent
    positive
  • Parallel to compensator blue
  • Perpendicular yellow

Xtals
74
Crystal Studies
Xtals
Sodium urate crystals viewed under polarized
light with a red plate makes those in the plane
of the long axis of the red plate yellow, which
indicates that they are negatively birefringent.
75
Crystal Studies
Xtals
Calcium pyrophosphate crystal viewed under
polarized light with a red plate. The crystal is
aligned in the long axis of the red plate, so
that it is bluish-white, which indicates that it
is weakly positively birefringent.
76
Specific ArthritidesThere are more than 90
Preisers disease avascular necrosis of scaphoid
77
Septic Arthritis
  • Hematogenous spread
  • Direct inoculation
  • Direct spread from bony or soft tissue infections

Septic
78
Septic Arthritis
  • Synovium infected before degrading enzymes
    released
  • Children hematogenous most common
  • Postoperative infection 10 of joint surgeries

Septic
79
Causes
  • Staphylococcus aureus most common (even in
    sickle cell)
  • Others streptococcus, Gram negatives, anaerobes
  • N. gonorrhoeae 20 monarticular
  • lt6 months E. coli, group B strep
  • IV drug users S. aureus, Gram negatives

Septic
80
Clinical Features
  • Based on hosts concurrent medical conditions
  • Painful, hot, swollen
  • Typical single joint
  • Knee 40 to 50
  • Hip 13 to 20
  • Shoulder 10 to 15
  • 20 polyarticular

Septic
81
Clinical Features
  • History of fever 80
  • Shaking chills 20
  • Elevated sedimentation rate more common than
    leukocytosis
  • Blood cultures grow causative organism 50 of
    the time
  • Radiographs not often useful

Septic
82
Management
  • Admit for joint drainage, IV antibiotics
  • Empiric therapy based on Grams stain
  • Parenteral narcotic analgesics, articular
    immobilization control pain and discomfort

Septic
83
Gouty Arthritis
  • Podagra foot goddess, a bad-tempered virgin, who
    attacked victims after they overindulged
  • Thought to be limited to men who had indulged in
    dietary or sexual excess

Gout
84
Gouty Arthritis
  • Galen (129-199 AD), an ex-gladiatorial surgeon in
    Rome, described gout as a discharge of the four
    humors of the body in unbalanced amounts into the
    joints (hence gout gutta, a drop)

Gout
85
Patron saint against gout
St. Tropez Feast 12/29
Gout
86
Be temperate in wine, in eating, girls and sloth
Or the gout will seize you and plague you both
Gout
87
Pathophysiology
  • Uric acid crystal deposits from supersaturated
    extracellular fluid
  • Risk factors obesity, hypertension, diabetes,
    alcohol, proximal loop diuretics, lead poisoning
  • During attack crystals ingested by PMNs ?
    inflammation

Gout
88
Pathophysiology
  • Middle-aged men, post-menopausal women
  • Increased uric acid usually present for 20 years
    before first attack
  • Uric acid often normal

Gout
89
Presentation
  • Great toe MTP joint in 75
  • Also tarsal, ankle, knee, wrist
  • Up to 40 polyarticular
  • Pain excruciating at onset
  • Can mimic septic joint
  • Usually self-limited
  • Systemic symptoms usually minimal or absent

Gout
90
Presentation
  • Subsequent attacks closer together, more joints,
    last longer
  • Long-term kidney stones

Gout
91
Presentation
  • Tophi foreign body granulomas with crystals as
    nidus, in musculo-tendinous unit olecranon
    bursa, Achilles tendon, hands, knees, etc.

Gout
92
Diagnosis
  • Rule out cellulitis, septic arthritis
    particularly if knee joint
  • All may have fever, leukocytosis, elevated ESR
  • Uric acid level not helpful
  • X-rays soft-tissue swelling (acute) or joint
    destruction (chronic)

Gout
93
Uric Acid Levels
  • Uric acid normal in 40
  • Tophi can form in cool body areas without
    hyperuricemia
  • Acute attack ? pain ? increased cortisol ? uric
    acid diuresis ? normalized level

Gout
94
Diagnosis
Gout
95
Diagnosis
  • Definitive diagnosis birefringent joint fluid
    crystals with polarizing microscope (a yellow
    crystal against a red background) and negative
    joint fluid culture

Gout
96
Acute Therapy Colchicine
  • Not diagnostic works on pseudogout
  • Contraindication hematologic, renal, hepatic
    dysfunction
  • Extravasation from IV ? tissue necrosis

Gout
97
Acute Therapy Colchicine
  • Inhibits microtubule formation
  • Most effective in first 24 hours
  • 0.6 mg / hour until pain controlled, max 6 mg or
    side effects (GI)
  • Average toxic dose 6.7 mg
  • Toxicity precedes improvement in more than 50

Gout
98
Acute Therapy Other
  • NSAIDs effective, indomethacin most common (75 to
    200 mg/day)
  • Contraindicated in PUD, GI bleed
  • If resistant prednisone taper
  • 40 mg/day first 3 to 5 days
  • Adrenocorticotrophic hormone
  • ACTH 40 IU to 80 IU IM

Gout
99
Pseudogout
  • Calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate (CPPD)
    crystal-deposition disease
  • Knee most common joint
  • Polyarticular possible
  • Pain less severe, patients older
  • Risk hypothyroid, Wilsons disease,
    hyperparathyroid, hemochromatosis, etc.

Pseudo
100
Diagnosis
  • Common elevated ESR, WBC
  • X-ray may show joint calcification
  • Joint fluid
  • Weakly positive birefringent crystals on
    polarized microscopy
  • Appear rhomboidal on regular light microscopy
  • Treatment same as gout

Pseudo
101
Chondrocalcinosis
Pseudo
102
Osteoarthritis
  • Degenerative joint disease
  • Most common form of arthritis
  • Loss of articular cartilage, reactive changes at
    joint margins
  • Synovitis in advanced disease
  • May have painful bone-to-bone interface

O A
103
Presentation / Diagnosis
  • Chief complaint pain
  • No systemic symptoms
  • Hands Bouchards, Heberdens nodes (osteophyte
    spurs)
  • Knee active passive crepitus
  • Routine lab tests normal
  • Radiographs joint- space narrowing, osteophyte
    formation

O A
104
Heberdens and Bouchards
Over DIP
Over PIP
O A
105
(No Transcript)
106
Treatment
  • Judicious exercise for muscle strengthening
  • Relieve muscle spasm
  • Support joint
  • Acetaminophen comparable to ibuprofen for
    short-term treatment
  • Ultimately joint replacement

O A
107
Gonococcal Arthritis
  • Woman men 41
  • Fever, chills, arthralgias, migratory
    tenosynovitis
  • Progresses to arthritis knee, ankle, wrist
  • Characteristic rash countable hemorrhagic
    necrotic pustules
  • Rarely have cervicitis or urethritis

G C
108
Gonococcal Arthritis
G C
109
Gonococcal Arthritis
G C
110
Diagnosis
  • Blood cultures usually negative
  • Synovial fluid cultures positive in less than 50
  • Grams stain positive more often than culture
  • Cervical, urethral, pharyngeal, rectal cultures
    positive 75

G C
111
Treatment
  • Admit to hospital
  • Ceftriaxone 1 g IM or IV daily, and 24 to 48
    hours after improvement
  • Ciprofloxacin 500 mg twice daily orally for total
    7 days of antibiotics
  • Spectinomycin 2 grams IM every 12 hours if
    beta-lactam allergic

G C
112
Viral Arthritis
  • Most common rubella, hepatitis B
  • Also mumps, adenoviruses, Epstein-Barr virus,
    enteroviruses
  • Deposition of soluble immune complexes in
    synovium with resultant inflammation

Virus
113
Rubella Arthritis
  • Often young women
  • Rash several days before
  • Acute, symmetric, usually polyarticular
  • Resolves within weeks
  • Recent infection or vaccination
  • Virus isolated from synovial fluid

Virus
114
Rubella
Virus
115
Hepatitis B Arthritis
  • Usually with or after prodrome of fever and
    lymphadenopathy
  • Often precedes jaundice
  • May be sudden and severe
  • PIP, knee, ankle, MP joints most commonly
    involved
  • Salicylates may be helpful

Virus
116
Lyme
  • Spirochete Borrelia burgdorferi
  • Vector Ixodes dammini on East Coast and Midwest
  • Arthritis late manifestation
  • Within 6 months, half of untreated have frank
    arthritis
  • Asymmetric
  • Most common in knees

Lyme
117
Presentation
  • Minimal joint pain, usually afebrile
  • Severity of initial presentation predictive of
    subsequent arthritis
  • Chronic arthritis more common in patients
    positive for HLA-DR4
  • Joint fluid inflammatory with PMN predominance
  • Diagnosis is clinical

Lyme
118
Presentation
Lyme
119
Ixodes
Lyme
120
Spondyloarthropathies
  • Seronegative negative rheumatoid factor
  • Sacroiliac involvement
  • Peripheral joint inflammation
  • Changes of ligamentous and tendinous insertion
    into bone
  • Genetic HLA-B27

Sero -
121
Spondyloarthropathies
  • Ankylosing spondylitis
  • Reactive arthritis (e.g. Reiters syndrome)
  • Psoriatic arthritis
  • Arthropathy of inflammatory bowel disease

Sero -
122
Ankylosing Spondylitis
  • Male predominance
  • Back pain
  • X-ray evidence of sacroiliitis
  • Symmetrically squared vertebral bodies, then
    bamboo spine
  • Morning stiffness, improves with exercise

Sero -
123
Ankylosing Spondylitis
Sero -
124
Ankylosing Spondylitis
  • Uveitis most common extra-articular
    manifestation
  • Peripheral joints involved in 30 of patients
    with enthesopathic involvement (plantar fasciitis
    and Achilles tendinitis)
  • Goal of therapy control pain, decrease
    inflammation

Sero -
125
Reiters Syndrome
  • Reactive arthritis in genetically susceptible
    host after infection with GU C. trachomatis, or
    GI shigella, salmonella, yersinia, campylobacter
  • Disease of men 15 to 35 years old arthritis
    develops 2 to 6 weeks after episode of urethritis
    or dysentery

Sero -
126
Reiters Syndrome
  • Polyarticular, asymmetric
  • Weight-bearing joints of lower extremities
    commonly involved knees, ankles, feet,
    particularly heels (lovers heel)

Sero -
127
Reiters Syndrome
  • Other signs appear early
  • Conjunctivitis, progress to iritis, uveitis,
    corneal ulceration
  • Painless ulcers mouth, tongue, glans penis
    (balanitis circinata)
  • Sausage-like fingers and toes
  • Keratoderma blennorrhagica on palms and soles

Sero -
128
Reiters Syndrome
Sero -
Keratoderma blenorrhagica
Balanitis circinata
129
Reiters Syndrome
  • Synovial fluid inflammatory with predominance
    of PMNs
  • Antigens in synovial membrane and joint fluid,
    cultures sterile
  • Increased ESR, WBC
  • HLA-B27 antigen in 80
  • Enthesopathic x-rays, particularly at IP joint of
    great toe

Sero -
130
Reiters Syndrome
  • NSAID two or three times daily
  • Doxycycline twice daily x 3 months
  • Intra-articular steroid injections
  • If persistent Sulfasalazine
  • Chronic therapy for erosive, deforming disease
  • Methotrexate
  • Azathioprine (Imuran)

Sero -
131
Psoriatic Arthritis
Sero -
132
Rheumatism
  • An older term used to describe any of a number of
    painful conditions of muscles, tendons, joints,
    and bones.
  • Rheumatism weed Canadian dogbane

133
Acute Rheumatic Fever
  • Believed to result from Group A streptococcus
    pharyngitis
  • Exact mechanism unclear
  • In decline since antibiotics
  • Probable abnormal humoral response to antigens

ARF
134
Clinical Syndrome
  • Recurring self-limited episodes of fever
    associated with polyarthritis, carditis /
    valvulitis, rash, subcutaneous nodules, or chorea
  • Occurs 2 to 3 weeks after streptococcal
    pharyngitis

ARF
135
Diagnosis Jones Criteria
  • Two major, or one major and two minor, criteria
    with evidence recent Group A streptococcal
    infection
  • Major manifestations polyarthritis, carditis,
    chorea, erythema marginatum, subcutaneous nodules
  • Migratory arthritis in large joints

ARF
136
Diagnosis Jones Criteria
  • Involves heart in 50
  • Pericarditis, congestive heart failure, valvular
    dysfunction, cardiomegaly
  • Neurologic Sydenhams chorea, weakness,
    behavioral disturbance
  • Sparing of sensory functions

ARF
137
Diagnosis Jones Criteria
ARF
Sinus tachycardia
1st degree AV block
RBBB pattern
Right atrial enlargement
Left atrial enlargement
Left ventricular strain
138
Diagnosis Jones Criteria
  • Erythema marginatum well-demarcated, pink
    nonpruritic rash, usually trunk, sometimes
    proximal limbs
  • Central clearing, may last hours

ARF
139
Erythema Marginatum
ARF
140
Diagnosis Jones Criteria
  • Subcutaneous nodules firm, nontender under skin
    overlying bony prominences

ARF
141
Laboratory Work-Up
  • Throat culture, ESR, CRP, ASO
  • Anti-DNase B 95 sensitive
  • Streptozyme test also documents recent
    streptococcal infection
  • Synovial fluid
  • Inflammatory (average WBC 16K)
  • Negative culture

ARF
142
Post-Streptococcal
  • Reactive arthritis closely related to ARF but
    distinct clinical entity
  • Sterile oligoarthritis associated with distant
    bacterial infection
  • Carditis rare, arthritis often severe
  • Treatment penicillin, erythromycin
  • Arthritis responds to salicylates

ARF
143
Rheumatoid Arthritis
R A
144
Rheumatoid Arthritis
  • Usually chronic gt20 acute
  • Women 2 to 3 x more than men
  • Immune complexes stimulate PMNs to release
    enzymes
  • Synovial cells proliferate, produce more
    inflammatory substances

R A
145
Presentation
  • Prodrome fatigue, weakness, musculoskeletal pain
  • Symmetric joint swelling hands (MP, PIP joints),
    wrists, elbows
  • Difficult to distinguish from viral arthropathy

R A
146
Presentation
  • Long-term changes MP and PIP swelling, ulnar
    deviation, swan-neck and boutonnière deformities
    of hands, limited wrist dorsiflexion

R A
147
Swan Neck Deformity
R A
148
Presentation
  • Knee effusion, muscle atrophy, Bakers cyst
  • Retrocalcaneal bursa
  • Subcutaneous nodules, pulmonary fibrosis,
    mononeuritis multiplex
  • Sjögrens and Feltys syndromes

R A
149
Bakers Cyst
R A
150
Subcutaneous Nodules
R A
151
Feltys Syndrome
  • Rheumatoid arthritis splenomegaly leukopenia
  • Frequent pneumonia and leg ulcers
  • 1 of RA patients

R A
152
Transverse Ligament Rupture
  • C1 on C2 subluxation in 70
  • Frank dislocation in 25
  • Cord compression in 11
  • With myelopathy
  • 5 years survival 80
  • 10 year survival 28
  • Anterior instability more common than posterior
    instability

R A
153
Transverse Ligament Rupture
R A
154
Treatment
  • Movement increases inflammation initial
    treatment rest
  • Suppress inflammation steroids, salicylates,
    gold, penicillamine, azathioprine, methotrexate,
    cyclosporine, sulfasalazine

R A
155
Nontraditional Thinking
  • The Mycoplasma Theory joint pain caused by
    subclinical mycoplasma infection, improves with
    doxycycline
  • Glucosamine and chondroitin possibly useful in
    osteoarthritis

? ? ?
156
Known Not to Work
  • ALFALFA - LAPACHOL - ALOE VERA - MACROBIOTIC DIET
    - AMINO ACIDS - MA-HUANG - ANT VENOM - MANDELL
    ARTHRITIS DIET - ARNICA MEGAVITAMIN THERAPY -
    ASCORBIC ACID - NATURAL AND ORGANIC FOODS - BARK
    TEAS - NIGHTSHADE VEGETABLES - BEE POLLEN - OZONE
    - BIOTIN - P VITAMINS - BOWEL CLEANSING - PABA -
    CHUIFONG TOUKUWAN - PANAX - CINNAMON - PAU D'ARCO
    - CLAY ENEMAS - POWDERED ANT - CLEMANTIS PROPOLIS
    - ROYAL JELLY - CLOVES - RAW MILK - COD LIVER OIL
    - RHUS TOXICODENDRON - COENZYME Q-10 - ROSE HIPS
    - COFFEE ENEMAS - RUTIN - COICIS SEMEN -
    SASSAFRAS - COLONICS - SELENIUM - COPPER
    BRACELETS - SHARK CARTILAGE - CYTOTOXIC TESTING -
    SNAKE VENOM - DEVIL'S CLAW - SOAPWEED - DISMUTASE
    (SUPEROXIDE DISMUTASE) - SPANISH BAYONET - DONG
    DIET - SPANISH FLY - ELIMINATION DIETS -
    STEPHANIA - FEVERFEW - TANG-KUEI - FIT FOR LIFE
    DIET - TEAS (FEVERFEW, GINSENG, SASSAFRAS) -
    FO-TI - THIAMINE - GARLIC - VEGETARIAN DIETS -
    GERMANIUM - VOLCANIC ASH - FASTING - GINSENG -
    WATER ENEMA - GREEN-LIPPED MUSSEL - WOOD SPIDER
    - HAIR ANALYSIS - YUCCA - HOMEOPATHY - ZEN
    MACROBIOTICS - HYDROGEN PEROXIDE - ZINC - KELP

? ? ?
157
Pearls
  • The number and distribution of joints involved
    helps pinpoint the most likely cause of
    arthritis.
  • Monarthritis is septic arthritis until proven
    otherwise.
  • Negative Grams stain of synovial fluid does not
    rule out bacterial arthritis.

158
Pearls
  • The most definitive test for evaluating an
    inflamed joint for the possibility of bacterial
    infection is examination of synovial fluid.
  • Delays in the diagnosis and treatment of septic
    arthritis worsen outcomes.

159
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