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Paediatric Rheumatology Phil Riley Consultant Paediatric Rheumatologist Teaching.

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Presentation on theme: "Paediatric Rheumatology Phil Riley Consultant Paediatric Rheumatologist Teaching."— Presentation transcript:

1 Paediatric Rheumatology Phil Riley Consultant Paediatric Rheumatologist Teaching

2 Introduction n Musculoskeletal pain common in childhood n Wide range of diagnoses -benign to malignant n JIA- early recognition and appropriate treatment prevents damage n JIA- Multidisciplinary team

3 Differential Diagnosis n Inflammatory n Mechanical n Psychological

4 Differential Diagnosis- Inflammatory n Reactive n Infection n Inflammatory disease n Systemic disease n Malignancy n Irritable hip

5 Differential Diagnosis- Mechanical n Trauma-accidental and NAI n Hypermobility n Osteochondritides n Degenerative disorders n Haematological n Metabolic n Tumours- benign and malignant

6 Differential- Psychogenic n Fibromyalgia n Functional illness n Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy

7 Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis n Unknown aetiology n Genetic predisposition n incidence 1 per 10,000 n prevalence 1 per 1,000

8 Disease Course n 50% still active after 25 years n X-ray Joint damage by 2.6 years n Increased mortality n Increased morbidity-Physical n -Growth n -Psychological n -Social

9 Classification of Juvenile Arthritis n <16 years n >6 weeks arthritis n Subtypes classified for first 6 months

10 Subtypes n Oligoarthritis1-4 -persistent-extended n Polyarthritis (RF negative)>=5 n Polyarthritis (RF positive)>=5 n systemic

11 Investigations-JIA n ANA- Antinuclear antibody n Inflammatory markers- CRP,ESR n FBC- Anaemia of chronic disease n x-ray -loss of joint space, erosions and carpal bone overcrowding n MRI- synovitis (gadolinium enhanced)

12 Uveitis n Chronic anterior uveitis n Often Asymptomatic n Young,female, oligoarthritis, positive ANA (30%) n Polyarthritis (5%) n systemic(rare) n Slit lamp 3-6 monthly for 7 years

13 Subtypes n Systemic Arthritis -Rash -temp over 2 weeks -with/without arthritis -with/without serositis -hepatosplenomegaly, lymphadenopathy

14 JIA n systemic rash

15 Systemic JIA n Quotidian fever

16 Systemic JIA n Macrophage Activation Syndrome(MAS) -Bleeding, purpura, bruising -  Nodes,liver,spleen -  FBC,ESR -  PT,APTT, FDP -  Fibrinogen,clotting factors n Bone Marrow n IV steroids,Cyclosporin

17 Subtypes n Enthesitis-related arthritis -HLA B27 n Psoriatic Arthritis n Other

18 Treatment Options n NSAIDs n Steroids n Joint injections n Methotrexate n Sulphasalazine n Ciclosporin n TNF drugs n Autologous stem cell transplantation

19 Questions n Oligoarthritis n ANA pos n normal slightly raised ESR,CRP n NSAIDS n Joint injection n Ophthalmology referral n Rehab/MDT

20 Questions n Polyarthritis n ANA positive or negative n Rh factor positive or negative n very raised ESR,CRP n Steroids n Methotrexate n Eyes n Rehab/MDT

21 Questions n Systemic n Rash n Quotidian fever n NSAIDS n Steroids n Methotrexate n Macrophage Activation Syndrome

22 Treatment Concepts n Early n Monitoring n Multidisciplinary

23 Treatment continued  Physiotherapy  restore function  improve muscle strength  splints/serial casts  Occupational therapy  Psychology

24 Spotter n Butterfly Rash

25 Spotter n Buttterfly

26 Spotter n Raynaud’s phenomenon

27 SLE- Diagnostic/ WHO classification criteria(4 of 11) n Malar rash(butterfly) n Discoid lupus rash n Photosensitivity n Oral/nasal mucosal ulceration n Non-erosive arthritis n nephritis -proteinuria/cellular casts

28 SLE-Diagnostic/WHO classification(4 of 11) n Encephalopathy-seizures/psychosis n Pleuritis/pericarditis n Haematological -lymphopaemia-thrombocytopaenia  positive immunoserology -anti ds-DNA n ANA positive

29 SLE- clinical features  Constitutional - fever/malaise/weight loss  Cutaneous  rash/photosensitivity/alopecia/mouth ulcers  Musculoskeletal  poly-arthritis/arthralgia  tenosynovitis  myopathy  avascular necrosis

30 SLE-Clinical features  Vascular  lupus crisis/Raynaud’s/livedo  Cardiac  pericarditis/myocarditis/endocarditis  Pulmonary  pleuritis/pneumonitis/haemorrhage

31 SLE-lab features n FBC- low platelets - low lymphocytes - low lymphocytes n Inflammatory markers- high ESR, normal CRP n ANA- very high ie >1:2560 n DsDNA- high n C3,C4- low

32 Spotter n Neonatal lupus

33 Spotter n Neonatal Lupus

34 Neonatal lupus  Maternal autoantibody transmission  Cong heart block (Ro/La) - 50%  Cutaneous neonatal lupus- 37%  Hepatic/GI tract - 8%  Haematologic-6%  Neurologic and pulmonary-1%

35 Spotter n Heliotrope Rash

36 Spotter n Gottrons papules

37 Spotter n Calcinosis

38 Spotter n Capillaroscopy n Abnormal “bushy” n Thickening and dropout

39 Definition of Juvenile Dermatomyositis(JDM) n limb-girdle and anterior neck flexor weakness n Muscle biopsy n Muscle enzyme increase n EMG n Dermatological features

40 JDM - clinical features  Proximal weakness  Vasculopathy  Heliotrope facial rash  Gottrons papules  Raised CK/LDH/AST/ALT  MR scan/muscle biopsy  Multi-organ occasionally

41 JDM - treatment  Steroids  pulse iv  oral tapering  Methotrexate  Cyclosporin/Immunoglobulin/Cyclophos phamide/Anti TNF  Physio/Rehab

42 Spotter n en coup de sabre

43 Spotter n Sclerodactly

44 Scleroderma in children  Systemic sclerosis  limited cutaneous/CREST  diffuse  Localised  linear scleroderma (en coup de sabre,morphoea)

45 Questions

46 Q1

47

48 Q2

49 Q3

50 Q4

51 Q5

52 Q6

53 Q7

54 Q8

55 Q9

56 Q10

57 Q11

58 Q12

59 Q13

60 Q14

61 Q15

62 Q16

63 Q17


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