connective tissue disease
DESCRIPTION
CONNECTIVE TISSUE DISEASE. SLE. Joint space narrowing is uncommon in systemic lupus erythematosus TRUE FALSE. ANSWER. Joint space narrowing is uncommon in systemic lupus erythematosus TRUE FALSE - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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CONNECTIVE TISSUE DISEASE
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SLE
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• Joint space narrowing is uncommon in systemic lupus erythematosusA. TRUEB. FALSE
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ANSWER
• Joint space narrowing is uncommon in systemic lupus erythematosusA. TRUEB. FALSE
- Joint space narrowing is uncommon, and when present is likely due to disuse atrophy or pressure from an adjacent subluxed bone. Altered stresses across the joint may also cause a "hook erosion" at the metacarpal heads due to capsular stress, mimicing findings of rheumatoid arthritis. This is more often observed on the radial side.
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• Patients with SLE are at increased risk for insufficiency fractures, possibly due to :A. Disuse demineratizationB. Osteopenia secondary to steroid therapyC. Normal or abnormal forces on weakened boneD. All of the above
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ANSWER
• Patients with SLE are at increased risk for insufficiency fractures, possibly due to :A. Disuse demineratizationB. Osteopenia secondary to steroid therapyC. Normal or abnormal forces on weakened boneD. All of the above
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• Distribution of radiographic abnormalities in the hand of patients with lupus arthropathyA. MCP and PIP joints of all digitsB. MCP and IP joints of the ulnar digits, particularly
the 4th and 5th fingersC. MCP and IP joints of all the digits; prominent
abnormalities of the thumbD. All of the above
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ANSWER
• Distribution of radiographic abnormalities in the hand of patients with lupus arthropathyA. MCP and PIP joints of all digits (RHEUMATOID
ARTHRITIS)B. MCP and IP joints of the ulnar digits, particularly
the 4th and 5th fingers (CLASSIC JACCOUD’S ARTHROPATHY)
C. MCP and IP joints of all the digits; prominent abnormalities of the thumb
D. All of the above
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CASE 1:
• 27 year old female with SLE, on steroid therapy
• (+) left hip pain
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ANSWER: AVASCULAR NECROSIS OF THE FEMORAL HEAD
• Osteonecrosis or AVN occurs in 5%–50% of SLE patients
• Mainly affects weight-bearing • The femoral head is most commonly
affected, followed by the humeral head, femoral condyle, and tibial plateau
• Radiographs are usually normal in early AVN, and late changes of bone sclerosis indicate the presence of irreversible articular damage
• With radiography, a grading system is used to denote the severity of AVN according to the sclerosis, flattening of the articular surface, and joint space abnormalities– stage 0 (clinically suspected AVN) to stage V
(obvious joint space narrowing and articular surface disruption)
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CASE 2
• Same patient• (+) ankle pain• No history of trauma
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ANSWER: INSUFFICIENCY FRACTURE DISTAL FIBULAR DIAPHYSIS
• Normal stress on abnormal bone can cause insufficiency fractures
• In patients with SLE, the pathogenesis of insufficiency fractures is unclear but may be related to deconditioning, accelerated bone loss due to steroid therapy, or both
• MR imaging may depict early or subtle insufficiency fractures, which may be occult on radiographs due to severe osteoporosis
• At T2-weighted MR imaging, insufficiency fractures appear as areas of high signal intensity due to bone marrow edema in characteristic stress locations
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CASE 3
• SLE patient• Leg pain• (+) fever
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ANSWER: OSTEOMYELITIS• Dermatologic factors,
corticosteroids, and vasculopathy predispose patients with SLE to septic arthritis and osteomyelitis
• Because of steroid therapy, infection can be masked, and chronic indolent disease is often seen
• Organisms: S aureus, gram-negative bacilli, and M tuberculosis
• Radiographic : progressive bone destruction and cartilage loss, periostitis, and joint effusion
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CASE 4
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ANSWER: MULTIPLE BONE INFARCTS
Anteroposterior radiograph of the left knee shows sclerosis in the distal femur and proximal tibia.
Sagittal T1-weighted MR image shows foci of isointense signal encircled by a low-signal-intensity rim in the distal femur and proximal tibia (arrows). The hypointense rim represents reparative granulation tissue surrounding infarcted bone.
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SCLERODERMA
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Patient with scleroderma.
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ANSWER: ACRO-OSTEOLYSIS• Refers to terminal tuft bony erosions. It is
associated with a heterogeneous group of pathological entities– primary acroosteolysis - Hajdu-Cheney
syndrome– psoriatic arthritis– hyperparathyroidism– polyvinyl chloride exposure– insensitivity to pain– ergot poisoning – thermal injury – extreme cold : frost bite– extreme heat : burns– leprosy– juvenile chronic arthritis (JCA/JIA)– dermatomyositis– vascular occlusion – Raynaud disease– Scleroderma
• Alterations at the distal IP joints are usually confined to regional or periarticular osteoporosis and swelling and thickening of the adjacent soft tissue, without evidence of joint space narrowing or osseous erosions
• However, joint manifestations in scleroderma closely resemble those of RA, with osteoporosis, joint space narrowing and osseous erosions
• In some patients with scleroderma, alterations occur at the DIP, articulations that are not commonly involved in RA.
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• Scleroderma-like syndrome with eosinophilia, hypergammaglobulinemia, but without systemic or vascular involvementA. SCLERODERMA ADULTORUMB. SHULMAN’S SYNDROMEC. THIBIERGE-WISSENBACH SYNDROMED. CREST SYNDROME
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ANSWER• Scleroderma-like syndrome with eosinophilia,
hypergammaglobulinemia, but without systemic or vascular involvementA. SCLERODERMA ADULTORUM – benign, self limited condition
unrelated to scleroderma that occurs after infection; characterized by non-pitting edema of the skin and spontaneous resolution within a few months
B. SHULMAN’S SYNDROMEC. THIBIERGE-WISSENBACH SYNDROME – combination of calcinosis
and digital ischemiaD. CREST SYNDROME – subcutaneous calcinosis, reynaud’s
phenomenon, esophageal abnormalities, sclerodactyly, telangirctasia
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• Chemical that can induce cutaneous abnormalities simulating those of sclerodermaA. VINYL CHLORIDEB. PENTAZOCINEC. BLEOMYCIND. ALL OF THE ABOVE
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ANSWER
• Chemical that can induce cutaneous abnormalities simulating those of sclerodermaA. VINYL CHLORIDEB. PENTAZOCINEC. BLEOMYCIND. ALL OF THE ABOVE– Other chemical agents: solvents, paraffin, silicone
implants, coccaine, rapeseed oil
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• Relatively specific dental sign of sclerodermaA. THICKENING OF PERIODONTAL MEMBRANEB. THICKENING OF ENAMEL AND DENTINC. THICKENING OF DENTIN AND GINGIVAD. THICKENING OF GINGIVA AND ENAMEL
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ANSWER
• Relatively specific dental sign of sclerodermaA. THICKENING OF PERIODONTAL MEMBRANEB. THICKENING OF ENAMEL AND DENTINC. THICKENING OF DENTIN AND GINGIVAD. THICKENING OF GINGIVA AND ENAMEL
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• Sites of osteolysis in scleroderma exceptA. PHALANGES OF THE HAND AND FOOTB. CARPAL BONESC. PROXIMAL POSTIONS OF RADIUS AND ULNAD. MANDIBLE
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ANSWER
• Sites of osteolysis in scleroderma exceptA. PHALANGES OF THE HAND AND FOOTB. CARPAL BONESC. PROXIMAL POSTIONS OF RADIUS AND ULNA
(DISTAL)D. MANDIBLE- OTHER SITES: RIBS, CLAVICLE, HUMERUS, ACROMION, CERVICAL SPINE
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RHEUMATIC FEVER
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• Patient with rheumatic fever
• A deforming non erosive arthropathy characterised by ulnar deviation of the second to 5th fingers with MCP subluxation.
• DIAGNOSIS?
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ANSWER: JACCOUD’S ARTHROPATHY
• hand x rays typically shows marked ulnar subluxation and deviation at the MCP joints
• absence of erosions is a notable feature, although occasionally hook erosions may be observed, which are similar to those seen in SLE and AS sevidence of muscle (soft tissue) atrophy also may be present
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• Diseases that may lead to deforming non-erosive arthropathyA. RHEUMATIC FEVERB. SLEC. RHEUMATOID ARTHRITISD. AGAMMAGLOBULINEMIAE. A, B & CF. ALL OF THE ABOVEG. NONE OF THE ABOVE
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ANSWER
• Diseases that may lead to deforming non-erosive arthropathyA. RHEUMATIC FEVERB. SLEC. RHEUMATOID ARTHRITISD. AGAMMAGLOBULINEMIAE. A, B & CF. ALL OF THE ABOVEG. NONE OF THE ABOVE - ALSO EHLERS-DANLOS SYNDROME
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• CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS NECESSARY FOR DIAGNOSIS OF JACCOUD’S ARTHROPATHY EXCEPT: A. HX OF RECURRENT ATTACKS OF ACUTE RHEUMATIC
FEVERB. IMMEDIATE RECOVERY AFTER JOINT
INFLAMMATIONC. ELICITATION OF TENDON CREPITUSD. JOINT DISEASE THAT IS GENERAKKY ASYMPTOMATIC
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ANSWER
• CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS NECESSARY FOR DIAGNOSIS OF JACCOUD’S ARTHROPATHY EXCEPT: A. HX OF RECURRENT ATTACKS OF ACUTE RHEUMATIC FEVERB. IMMEDIATE RECOVERY AFTER JOINT INFLAMMATION
(DELAYED RECOVERY; WITH SUBSEQUENT DEFORMITY OF THE MCP JOINT)
C. ELICITATION OF TENDON CREPITUSD. JOINT DISEASE THAT IS GENERAKKY ASYMPTOMATIC- ALSO: CHARACTERISTIC ARTICULAR DEFORMITY CONSISTING OF FLEXION AND ULNAR DEVIATION AT THE MCP, PARTICULARLY IN THE 4TH AND 5TH DIGITS
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