Rheumatoid Hand - Fiery Fingers Genesis
- Autoimmune basis: Chronic, systemic inflammatory disorder primarily affecting synovial joints.
- Key pathology: Persistent synovitis.
- Synovial lining cells proliferate (hyperplasia).
- Forms invasive pannus tissue.
- Destructive cascade:
- Pannus erodes articular cartilage, subchondral bone, ligaments, and tendons.
- Tenosynovitis is common; can lead to tendon adhesions or rupture (e.g., Vaughan-Jackson syndrome).
- Result: Joint instability, deformity, and functional loss.
⭐ The earliest pathological changes in rheumatoid arthritis often occur in the synovium of small joints of the hands (MCP, PIP) and feet (MTP).
Deformity Parade - Twisted Manifestations

- Wrist:
- Radial deviation & carpal ulnar translocation.
- Volar subluxation.
- Caput ulnae syndrome: dorsal ulnar head, supination, pain, ↓ rotation, ECU rupture.
- MCP Joints:
- Volar subluxation/dislocation.
- Ulnar deviation of fingers. 📌 Mnemonic: "Wind-swept hand".
- PIP/DIP Joints:
- Swan Neck Deformity: PIP hyperextension, DIP flexion.

- Boutonnière Deformity: PIP flexion, DIP hyperextension.

- Swan Neck Deformity: PIP hyperextension, DIP flexion.
- Thumb (Nalebuff Classification):
- Type I (Most common): MCP flexion, IP hyperextension (Boutonnière-like).
- Type III: MCP hyperextension, IP flexion (Swan neck-like).
- Type VI (Arthritis Mutilans): Severe bone resorption, "opera-glass hand".
⭐ Ulnar deviation at MCP joints with wrist radial deviation is classic RA hand appearance (Z-deformity).
Diagnostic Clues - Spotting the Signs
- Symptoms: Symmetrical polyarthritis, morning stiffness >1 hr.
- Signs:
- MCP, PIP joint swelling & tenderness (DIPs usually spared).
- Deformities:
- Ulnar deviation.
- Swan neck (PIP hyperextension, DIP flexion).
- Boutonnière (PIP flexion, DIP hyperextension).
- Z-thumb (MCP flexion, IP hyperextension).
- Caput ulnae (dorsal ulnar head subluxation).
- Vaughan-Jackson syndrome (extensor tendon ruptures, 5th→4th).
- Labs: ↑ ESR, CRP; (+) RF; (+) Anti-CCP antibodies.

⭐ Anti-CCP antibodies are highly specific for RA and may predict erosive disease.
Treatment Toolkit - Mending & Modifying
- Goal: ↓Pain, ↑Function, Correct Deformity, Halt Progression.
- Conservative Cornerstone:
- Pharmacological:
- DMARDs (Methotrexate, Leflunomide, Sulfasalazine) - 1st line.
- Biologics (TNF-α inhibitors, Rituximab) - for refractory cases.
- NSAIDs & Corticosteroids (oral, intra-articular) - for symptom control.
- Rehabilitation:
- Splinting: Resting (night), Functional (day).
- Physiotherapy & Occupational Therapy: ROM exercises, joint protection.
- Pharmacological:
- Surgical Interventions (when conservative fails or severe deformity):
- Prophylactic: Synovectomy (early, esp. wrist, MCPs).
- Reconstructive:
- Tendon surgery: Repair, transfer, tenodesis (e.g., EPL rupture, Caput ulnae syndrome).
- Arthroplasty: MCP (silicone most common), PIP, Wrist.
- Arthrodesis: Wrist, Thumb (CMC, MCP, IP), Finger DIPs/PIPs (for stability).
⭐ MCP joint arthroplasty is preferred over fusion to preserve motion, crucial for hand function.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- MCP joints typically exhibit ulnar deviation and palmar subluxation.
- Swan neck deformity is characterized by PIP hyperextension and DIP flexion.
- Boutonniere deformity presents with PIP flexion and DIP hyperextension.
- The most frequent thumb deformity is Nalebuff Type I (Boutonniere-like).
- Extensor tendon ruptures are frequent; EPL rupture at Lister's tubercle is classic (Vaughan-Jackson syndrome).
- Caput ulnae syndrome features dorsal DRUJ subluxation, pain, and supination weakness.
- Key surgical goals include pain relief, improved function, and deformity correction.
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