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Seronegative Spondyloarthropathies

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Presentation on theme: "Seronegative Spondyloarthropathies"— Presentation transcript:

1 Seronegative Spondyloarthropathies
M.Valešová

2 Spectrum Ankylosing spondylitis Psoriatic arthritis Reactive arthritis
Enteropathic arthritis Undifferentiated spondyloarthritis Juvenile AS

3 Ankylosing spondylitis (AS)

4 Demography AS Prevalence AS 0.05-0.23%, 3-4X male
UHCW catchment area – AS pts

5 Burden of AS SMR 1.5 10% less labour participation
15% constraints at work Poor quality of life cf worse than RA

6 Aetiology AS has been closely associated with the expression of the HLA-B27 gene The response to the therapeutic blockade of TNFalpha indicates that this cytokine plays a central role in AS Examination of inflamed SI joints in AS patients has demonstrated high levels of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells and macrophages. The overlapping features with reactive arthritis and IBD (SpAs) suggests a possible role for intestinal bacteria in the pathogenesis of AS.

7 Features AS?

8 Physical signs and diagnosis

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10 Diagnostic criteria – Modified New York criteria
Radiologic criteria : sacroiliitis - grade 2 bilaterally or grade 3-4 unilaterally Clinical criteria : LBP and stiffness > 3 months improved with exercise and not relieved by rest, limitation of L/spine motion in frontal and sagittal planes, limitation of chest expansion relative to normal values correlated with age and sex Diagnosis : radiologic criteria and at least one clinical

11 Schober’s test

12 Sacroiliitis

13 AS Clinical Features - axial
Early AS Romanus lesion Advanced AS bony ankylosis

14

15 AS Clinical Features - peripheral
30% hip and shoulder disease Peripheral enthesopathy

16 Complications - Fracture
Traumatic C5/6 also C6/7 and C7/T1 Unstable – immobilization and fixation Osteoporotic (20-60%) and vertebral fractures (8-15%) Discitis

17 Complications - Spondylodiscitis
5%, dorsal spine Inflammatory Posterior # and instability

18 AS Clinical Features – extra-articular - Uveitis
20-30% B27 +ve Acute unilateral pain, increased lacrimation, photophobia, blurred vision Circumcorneal congestion, iris discoloured Pupil small (irregular) Slit lamp – exudates In anterior chamber

19 AS extra-articular features
Psoriasis 10-15%

20 AS Clinical Features – extra-articular – Inflammatory bowel
GI - Clinically silent enteric mucosal lesions 30-60% UC and Crohn’s 5-15% spinal and 10-20% peripheral arthritis

21 AS Clinical Features – extra-articular - Cardiac
2% Increases with age, duration and peripheral arthritis Aortic regurgitation – 3.5% (after 15years) and 10% (after 30 years) Conduction defects – 2.7% (after 15years) and 8.5% (after 30 years)

22 AS Clinical Features – extra-articular - Upper lobe fibrosis
1.3% 20 years after onset Bilateral linear or patchy opacities Later cystic Colonized by aspergillus

23 AS Clinical Features – extra-articular
Neurological – fracture dislocation, Cauda equina syndrome, atlanto-axial disease Renal – amyloidosis, IgA nephropathy, analgesic nephropathy

24 Investigations L/spine and SIJ x-rays CRP and ESR
HLA B-27 – high clinical suspicion but x-ray not diagnostic – if positive worth referring as MRI can confirm pre-radiographic AS

25 AS – treatment Physiotherapy NSAIDS ‘DMARDs’ and steroids
TNF alpha blockade Surgery

26 Psoriatic arthritis (PsA)

27 Demography - PsA No widely accepted criteria for diagnosis of PsA
BSR guidelines estimate prevalence of 0.1% -1% patients in UHCW Peak age of onset: years Equal sex distribution

28 Burden of PsA 40%–57% have deforming arthritis 11%–19% are disabled
Mortality is increased, compared with general population

29 PsA – clinical features
5 clinical subgroups: (Symmetrical) polyarthritis (RA-like) – 50% cases Asymmetrical oligoarthritis - 35% cases DIP disease - 5% cases Spondylitis (axial involvement) – 5% cases Arthritis mutilans - 5% cases ……..but much overlap

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31 Physical signs and Diagnosis

32 PsA –bone proliferation and destruction

33 Treatment NSAIDs DMARDs – Sulphasalazine, Methotrexate, Leflunomide, Cyclosporin Steroids TNF alpha blockade OT, PT Surgery Dermatology input

34 Reactive arthritis features ?

35 Reactive arthritis Young adults, equal sex Incidence of 30-40/100,000
Post urethritis/cervicitis or infectious diarrhoea eg campylobacter, salmonella, shigella, yersinia,chlamydia – 1-6 weeks Sero-ve features + conjunctivitis, balanitis, oral ulcers, pustular psoriasis

36

37 Reactive arthritis Culture – throat, urine, stool, urethra/cervix
Treatment – NSAIDs, steroids –intra-articular, antibiotics – chlamydia, DMARDs eg sulphasalazine

38 Summary Young adults Enthesitis, peripheral arthritis, spinal inflammation Psoriasis, inflammatory bowel disease, anterior uveitis, prior GU/GI infection B27 screening in inflammatory back pain with normal x-rays TNF alpha blockers – new hope


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