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Rheumatology

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Manage episode 202834760 series 2108787
Content provided by PA Study Sesh. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by PA Study Sesh or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ro.player.fm/legal.
This week on PA Study Sesh, we’ll learn about Rheumatology.
A note about ANA, RF, ESR, CRP
ANA: Antinuclear antibodies
Shows antibodies against self
Can be positive in healthy people
Also induced by certain drugs & cancers
NONSPECIFIC
CRP: C-reactive protein
Produced in the early stages of inflammatory process.
NONSPECIFIC
ESR: erythrocyte sedimentation rate “sed rate”
Rate at which rbcs settle
NONSPECIFIC
RF: Rheumatoid Factor
Autoantibody to a fragment of IgG
NONSPECIFIC
In Summary: These are all NONSPECIFIC and only clue you in to the presence of inflammation and auto-immune disease. They do not help you definitively distinguish one disease from another and therefore (in my opinion) are not worth memorizing their absence/presence in each disease for PANCE/PANRE purposes.
Fibromyagia
* Chronic, widespread muscle pain
* Middle aged women
* Associated fatigue, fibro fog
* Diffuse pain in 11/18 trigger points >3 months
* Clinical diagnosis
* Tx: exercise (swimming), OTC pain medication, TCA
Reactive Arthritis (Reiter Syndrome)
* Autoimmune response to an infection elsewhere
* Young males most common
* Arthritis, conjunctivitis/uveitis, urethritis
* Keratoderma blenorrhagicum (hyperkeratotic lesions on palms/soles)
* s/p chlamydia #1, may also follow gonorrhea or GI infections
* Labs: Often HLA B-27 + (young males like ankylosing spondylitis)
* Can’t pee, can’t see, can’t climb a (bamboo) tree, can’t sleep with me
* Tx: NSAIDS
* Abx if infection not treated
Gout
* Uric acid
* Most patients are under excretors, which explains why associated with food consumption
* Purine-rich foods, TZD, ACE/ARBs, ASA, Pyrazinamide, Ethambutol (TAPE)
* Men most common
* 1st MTP joint = podagra
* Red, swollen, tender joint
* Arthrocentesis=gold standard
* Negatively birefringent, needle shaped urate crystals
* Tophi: colletion of solid uric acid (ears, eyelids, fingers)
* X-ray
* Rate bite erosions (recurrent)
* Tx:
* Acute: NSAIDS (indomethacin), but avoid ASA
* 2nd line= colchicine
* Chronic:
* Colchicine (can be used in both!)
* Probenecid (uricosuric drug)= increase excretion
* Allopurinol (Xanthine Oxidase Inhibitor)- decreases uric acid production, so not used in acute disease.
Pseudogout
* Calcium pyrophosphate
* Large joints. Knee #1
* Red, swollen, tender joint
* Arthrocentesis:
* Postitively birefringent prism shaped (rhomboid)
* Tx: NSAIDS, steroid injection
* Colchicine also used acute & chronic.
* Prophylaxis if more than 3 attacks per year
Juvenile RA
* AKA juvenile idiopathic arthritis
* Prior to age 16, typically resolves by puberty
* 3 types
* Oligoarticular (50%)
* Less than 5 joints involved in the first 6 months (typically large joints)
* Swollen, tender, warm, without erythema
* May have concomitant anterior uveitis
* Refer to ophthomology
* + ANA
* Symptomatic treatment (NSAIDS)
* Polyarticular (30%)
* Most similar to adult RA
* If in a teenager, consider early RA presentation
* >5 joints involved during 1st 6 months (usually symmetric)
* Eye involvement less common, but possible
* + ANA +/- RF
* TX: NSAIDS
*
* Systemic (20%) Still’s Disease
* Intermittent,
  continue reading

22 episoade

Artwork

Rheumatology

PA Study Sesh

published

iconDistribuie
 
Manage episode 202834760 series 2108787
Content provided by PA Study Sesh. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by PA Study Sesh or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ro.player.fm/legal.
This week on PA Study Sesh, we’ll learn about Rheumatology.
A note about ANA, RF, ESR, CRP
ANA: Antinuclear antibodies
Shows antibodies against self
Can be positive in healthy people
Also induced by certain drugs & cancers
NONSPECIFIC
CRP: C-reactive protein
Produced in the early stages of inflammatory process.
NONSPECIFIC
ESR: erythrocyte sedimentation rate “sed rate”
Rate at which rbcs settle
NONSPECIFIC
RF: Rheumatoid Factor
Autoantibody to a fragment of IgG
NONSPECIFIC
In Summary: These are all NONSPECIFIC and only clue you in to the presence of inflammation and auto-immune disease. They do not help you definitively distinguish one disease from another and therefore (in my opinion) are not worth memorizing their absence/presence in each disease for PANCE/PANRE purposes.
Fibromyagia
* Chronic, widespread muscle pain
* Middle aged women
* Associated fatigue, fibro fog
* Diffuse pain in 11/18 trigger points >3 months
* Clinical diagnosis
* Tx: exercise (swimming), OTC pain medication, TCA
Reactive Arthritis (Reiter Syndrome)
* Autoimmune response to an infection elsewhere
* Young males most common
* Arthritis, conjunctivitis/uveitis, urethritis
* Keratoderma blenorrhagicum (hyperkeratotic lesions on palms/soles)
* s/p chlamydia #1, may also follow gonorrhea or GI infections
* Labs: Often HLA B-27 + (young males like ankylosing spondylitis)
* Can’t pee, can’t see, can’t climb a (bamboo) tree, can’t sleep with me
* Tx: NSAIDS
* Abx if infection not treated
Gout
* Uric acid
* Most patients are under excretors, which explains why associated with food consumption
* Purine-rich foods, TZD, ACE/ARBs, ASA, Pyrazinamide, Ethambutol (TAPE)
* Men most common
* 1st MTP joint = podagra
* Red, swollen, tender joint
* Arthrocentesis=gold standard
* Negatively birefringent, needle shaped urate crystals
* Tophi: colletion of solid uric acid (ears, eyelids, fingers)
* X-ray
* Rate bite erosions (recurrent)
* Tx:
* Acute: NSAIDS (indomethacin), but avoid ASA
* 2nd line= colchicine
* Chronic:
* Colchicine (can be used in both!)
* Probenecid (uricosuric drug)= increase excretion
* Allopurinol (Xanthine Oxidase Inhibitor)- decreases uric acid production, so not used in acute disease.
Pseudogout
* Calcium pyrophosphate
* Large joints. Knee #1
* Red, swollen, tender joint
* Arthrocentesis:
* Postitively birefringent prism shaped (rhomboid)
* Tx: NSAIDS, steroid injection
* Colchicine also used acute & chronic.
* Prophylaxis if more than 3 attacks per year
Juvenile RA
* AKA juvenile idiopathic arthritis
* Prior to age 16, typically resolves by puberty
* 3 types
* Oligoarticular (50%)
* Less than 5 joints involved in the first 6 months (typically large joints)
* Swollen, tender, warm, without erythema
* May have concomitant anterior uveitis
* Refer to ophthomology
* + ANA
* Symptomatic treatment (NSAIDS)
* Polyarticular (30%)
* Most similar to adult RA
* If in a teenager, consider early RA presentation
* >5 joints involved during 1st 6 months (usually symmetric)
* Eye involvement less common, but possible
* + ANA +/- RF
* TX: NSAIDS
*
* Systemic (20%) Still’s Disease
* Intermittent,
  continue reading

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