Limited time75% off all plans
Get the app

Arthritides: Inflammatory and Degenerative

Arthritides: Inflammatory and Degenerative

Arthritides: Inflammatory and Degenerative

On this page

Overview & OA - Joint's Wear & Tear

  • Arthritis Types:
    • Degenerative: Osteoarthritis (OA) - most common.
    • Inflammatory: RA, Spondyloarthropathies, Crystal, Septic.
  • Osteoarthritis (OA) - "Wear & Tear":
    • Progressive articular cartilage loss; subchondral bone changes.
    • Risk Factors: Age, obesity, joint trauma, genetics.
    • Clinical: Pain (worse with use), morning stiffness (< 30 min), crepitus, ↓ROM.
    • Common Sites: Knees, hips, hands (DIP, PIP, 1st CMC), spine.
  • Radiographic Features (OA) 📌 Mnemonic: LOSS:
    • Loss of joint space (asymmetric)
    • Osteophytes (marginal)
    • Subchondral sclerosis
    • Subchondral cysts (geodes)

⭐ Osteophytes are a hallmark of OA, particularly at weight-bearing joints like the knee and hip.

Rheumatoid Arthritis - Fiery Joint Attack

  • Chronic, systemic autoimmune disease; symmetrical polyarthritis.
  • Targets synovial joints: pannus formation → cartilage/bone destruction.
  • Distribution: MCP, PIP (hands/feet), wrists, C-spine. Spares DIPs.
  • X-ray:
    • Early: Soft tissue swelling, juxta-articular osteoporosis.
    • Late: Uniform joint space narrowing, marginal erosions ("bare areas"), subluxations, deformities (swan neck, boutonniere).
  • 📌 LOPsided EROSION for RA: Loss of joint space, Osteoporosis (juxta-articular), Periarticular swelling, Soft tissue swelling, Erosions (marginal), Deformities, Subluxations.

⭐ Marginal erosions, often at the 'bare areas' (cartilage-free zones), are characteristic of Rheumatoid Arthritis.

Seronegatives - Spine's Twisted Tales

  • Group of inflammatory arthritides (HLA-B27 associated, RF negative). 📌 Mnemonic: PAIR (Psoriatic, Ankylosing Spondylitis, IBD-associated, Reactive).
  • Common features: Sacroiliitis, enthesitis (inflammation at tendon/ligament insertion), spondylitis (vertebral inflammation).
  • Ankylosing Spondylitis (AS):
    • Bilateral, symmetrical sacroiliitis (earliest sign).
    • Romanus lesions (shiny corners), vertebral body squaring.
    • Marginal, thin, vertical syndesmophytes → Bamboo spine; Dagger sign (ossified supraspinous/interspinous ligaments).
  • Psoriatic Arthritis (PsA):
    • Often asymmetrical or unilateral sacroiliitis.
    • Bulky, non-marginal, asymmetrical syndesmophytes; paravertebral ossification.
    • Peripheral: Dactylitis ("sausage digits"), "pencil-in-cup" deformity (hands/feet).
  • Reactive Arthritis (Reiter's Syndrome):
    • Asymmetrical sacroiliitis.
    • Bulky, non-marginal syndesmophytes, often less extensive than PsA.
    • "Lover's heel" (calcaneal enthesitis/spurs). 📌 Mnemonic: Can't see (conjunctivitis), can't pee (urethritis), can't climb a tree (arthritis).
  • Enteropathic Arthritis (IBD-associated):
    • Axial involvement radiographically often resembles AS (bilateral, symmetrical sacroiliitis, syndesmophytes).

⭐ Sacroiliitis is a common early feature in seronegative spondyloarthropathies; bilateral and symmetrical in AS, often unilateral or asymmetrical in PsA and Reactive arthritis. AS vs PsA Phenotypesoka

Crystal & Bugs - Joint Invaders

  • Gout (MSU)
    • Crystal: Monosodium Urate ($NaC_5H_3N_4O_3$).
    • Radiology:
      • Early: Soft tissue swelling.
      • Late: "Punched-out" erosions, overhanging edges (Martel's sign).
      • Tophi. Joint space preserved late.
    • Site: 1st MTP (podagra).
  • CPPD (Pseudogout)
    • Crystal: Calcium Pyrophosphate Dihydrate ($Ca_2P_2O_7 \cdot 2H_2O$).
    • Radiology:
      • Chondrocalcinosis.
      • OA-like changes (radiocarpal, patellofemoral). Hook osteophytes (MCPs).

    ⭐ Chondrocalcinosis (calcification of hyaline or fibrocartilage) is the radiographic hallmark of CPPD.

  • Septic Arthritis (Infection)
    • Radiology:
      • Early: Effusion, swelling.
      • Rapid joint space narrowing, juxta-articular osteoporosis.
      • Ill-defined erosions, bone destruction.
    • 📌 SJOE: Swelling → Joint space loss → Osteoporosis → Erosions.
FeatureGoutCPPD
CrystalMSU ($NaC_5H_3N_4O_3$)CPPD ($Ca_2P_2O_7 \cdot 2H_2O$)
Radiographic Hallmark"Punched-out" erosions, overhanging edgeChondrocalcinosis
Common Sites1st MTP, ankle, kneeKnee, wrist, MCP joints

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • RA: Symmetrical erosive polyarthritis (MCP, PIP), spares DIPs; periarticular osteopenia.
  • AS: Bilateral symmetrical sacroiliitis is hallmark; bamboo spine (syndesmophytes), dagger sign.
  • PsA: Asymmetrical arthritis, pencil-in-cup (DIPs), sausage digits, fluffy periostitis.
  • OA: Asymmetrical joint space narrowing, osteophytes, subchondral sclerosis & cysts; no erosions.
  • Gout: "Rat-bite" erosions (juxta-articular, overhanging edge), tophi; 1st MTP classic.
  • CPPD: Chondrocalcinosis in cartilage (knees, wrists) is pathognomonic.
  • Reactive Arthritis: Asymmetrical oligoarthritis (lower limb), sacroiliitis, enthesitis.

Continue reading on Oncourse

Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.

CONTINUE READING — FREE

or get the app

Rezzy — Oncourse's AI Study Mate

Have doubts about this lesson?

Ask Rezzy, your AI Study Mate, to explain anything you didn't understand

Enjoying this lesson?

Get full access to all lessons, practice questions, and more.

START FOR FREE