approach to the hot swollen - rcp london

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Page 1: Approach to the hot swollen - RCP London
Page 2: Approach to the hot swollen - RCP London

Approach to the hot swollen

joint

History

Examination

Investigations

When to get help

Septic Arthritis

Gout

CPPD/Pseudogout

Page 3: Approach to the hot swollen - RCP London

History/Examination

Site

Monoarthritis vs oligo-(<4) or polyarthritis

Onset

“Went to bed normal” –crystal arthritis

Preceeding illnesses

Last 6 weeks – diarrhea; urogenital infection; intravesicular BCG

Trauma

Page 4: Approach to the hot swollen - RCP London

History/Examination

Fevers/rigors/SEPSIS

Restricted range of movement

Eyes: conjunctivitis, uveitis

Mouth: oral ulceration

Skin: keratoderma

blenorrhagica, psoriasis,

erythema nodosum

Genital: ulceration, urethritis,

discharge

By Photo Credit:Content Providers(s): CDC/ Dr. M. F. ReinTranswiki approved by: w:en:User:Dmcdevit - This media comes from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Public Health Image Library (PHIL), with

identification number #6950. https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=2740350

Page 5: Approach to the hot swollen - RCP London

British Society of Rheumatology

“Patients with a short history of a hot,

swollen and tender joint (or joints) with

restriction of movement should be

regarded as having septic arthritis until

proven otherwise”

Coakley G., et al., BSR & BHPR, BOA, RCGP and BSAC guidelines for management of the hot swollen joint in adults. Rheumatology

(2006) , 45(8) pp 1039-1041

Page 6: Approach to the hot swollen - RCP London

Investigations

Neutrophilia Septic arthritis

↑ESR/CRP Non-specific: inflammatory arthritis

Immunology: ANA

Rheumatoid Factor

Anti-CCP

Lupus

RA/Sjorgrens/MCTD/SLE

Rheumatoid Arthritis ?palindromic

RA

Clotting Prior to aspiration. Presence of

haemarthosis

Page 7: Approach to the hot swollen - RCP London

Synovial Fluid Interpretation

White cell count: EDTA bottle

<2000 white cells/mm3 – non-inflammatory

>2000 wcc/mm3 – inflammatory

Higher values eg >50,000 wcc/mm3 – joint sepsis

Polymorphs just suggests inflammatory process

Lymphocytosis – TB?

Gram stain, allow ≥48 hours culture

Some organisms don’t show up on gram stain or culture

Fluid crystals

Page 8: Approach to the hot swollen - RCP London

Can I aspirate?

By MBq Disk - Own work (Original text: selbst erstellt), Public Domain,

https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=23642006

RELATIVE C.I.

Anticoagulation –

aspirate if infection

suspected

Plts – aspirate

Haemophilias – factor

support

ABSOLUTE C.I.

Page 9: Approach to the hot swollen - RCP London

Septic Arthritis

Most serious differential

Between 8-27% of presentations of acutely swollen joints1,2

11% mortality3

Hot, swollen, tender joints

Very often decreased range of movement

May not be a fever

Page 10: Approach to the hot swollen - RCP London

Polyarticular septic arthritis

Up to 22% of all septic arthritis thought to be polyarticular4

20% afebrile4

Only 63% leucocytosis4

Other studies of pneumococcal septic arthritis

Up to 36% patients polyarticular disease5

Endocarditis, HIV

RA, Diabetes, EtOH excess

Page 11: Approach to the hot swollen - RCP London

Septic Arthritis

Coakley G. et al. BSR & BHPR, BOA, RCGP and BSAC

guidelines for management of the hot swollen joint in

adults. Rheumatology (2006); 45:1039-1041

Page 12: Approach to the hot swollen - RCP London

Aetiology

Haematogenous or direct

Often damaged joints eg RA, SLE

Differential: reactive?

Reactive arthritis vs septic joint? Suspect sepsis if WCC

>50,000mm3 (higher count, higher suspicion)6

Page 13: Approach to the hot swollen - RCP London

Septic arthritis

Common agents:

Gonococcal – especially in young, sexually active

Staphylococcus aureus

Prosthetic joints

Immunocompromised

Rheumatoid arthritis

Strepotococcus viridans, S pneumoniae and Group B

streptococci

Pseudomonas in IVDU

MRSA residential care/hospitalized/skin ulcers

Page 14: Approach to the hot swollen - RCP London

Imaging

Limited use from plain films

chondrocalcinosis

MRI

Osteomyelitis

Hips require radiologically guided aspiration

USS

Orthopaedics with image intensfier

Page 15: Approach to the hot swollen - RCP London

Sepsis Six

THREE IN

①Antibiotics

②Oxygen – high flow

③Fluid: Hartmanns

30-60ml/kg

THREE OUT

①Lactate

②Catheter – hourly

urine output

③Blood Cultures

Aspirate the joint before antibiotic (but

don’t delay antibiotic therapy)

Page 16: Approach to the hot swollen - RCP London

Antibiotic choices

2 weeks IV, 4 weeks oral

Flucloxacillin

Rifampicin

Useful for killing organisms that are protected within a

biofilm

Not used alone

Consider MRSA or pseudomonas risk factors

Involve microbiology: ITU, IVDU

Page 17: Approach to the hot swollen - RCP London

Surgical options

Arthroscopic drainage

Arthroscopic lavage

Prosthetic joint infection

Removal of joint followed by 6 weeks antibiotic therapy

Realm of T&O only

Prosthetic joints must only be aspirated in a sterile

environment (i.e. orthopaedic theatre)

Page 18: Approach to the hot swollen - RCP London

Gout: epidemiology

Epidemiology

M:F = 9:1

Prevalence increases in women after menopause

Page 19: Approach to the hot swollen - RCP London

Risk factors

Increased urate production

Psoriasis, malignancy, obesity

Increased purine intake

Meat, alcohol

Renal risk factors

Genetics

Metabolic syndrome

Renal impairment

Drugs that reduce renal function

Relationships between hyperuricaemia and insulin resistance, cardiovascular disease and hypertension7

Drugs

Low dose aspirin

Calcineurin inhibitors

Diuretics

Page 20: Approach to the hot swollen - RCP London

Urate nephropathy

Chronic uric acid nephropathy

Chronic interstitial nephritis

Uric acid nephrolithiasis

Acute uric acid nephropathy

Urate crystals precipitate out and obstruct tubules

Often with malignancy or tumour lysis

Manage by lowering serum urate levels

Page 21: Approach to the hot swollen - RCP London

General principles of acute

flare

Treat secondary inflammatory process (synovitis)

More effective if started sooner

Don’t attempt to lower urate in acute flare

Don’t stop already commenced urate lowering therapy

Hydrate

Stop precipitating medication if possible

Low dose salicylate

Thiazide or loop diuretics

Page 22: Approach to the hot swollen - RCP London

Management of acute flare:

oral NSAIDs

Poor quality RCTs – but anecdotally very useful

Commonly used

Safety

GI

Renal failure and CKD

Cardiovascular events with COX-2 inhibitors

Naproxen 500mg BD

Page 23: Approach to the hot swollen - RCP London

Management of acute flare:

oral COLCHICINE

500 micrograms TDS

Reduce dose if CrCl <45ml/min

Diarrhoea, peripheral neuopathy

Caution with statins, clarithromcyin, drugs that inhibit

Cytochrome P450 3A4

Caution in severe hepatic or renal impairment

Use UNTIL FLARE SUBSIDES

Page 24: Approach to the hot swollen - RCP London

Management of acute flare:

intrarticular steroids

Commonly used where comorbidites preclude use of NSAIDs/colchicine

One (or two) affected joint(s)

Exclude infection

Not to be used in systemic infection

Little direct evidence in gout

Anecdotally very effective, quick

Page 25: Approach to the hot swollen - RCP London

Management of acute flare:

Oral glucocorticoids

Cannot tolerate NSAIDs/colchicine

Multiple joint flare

Caution:

Heart failure

Poorly controlled hypertension

Diabetes

Prednisolone 30 – 50mg daily

Taper over 7-10 days after resolution flare

Prone to recurrence on withdrawal

Page 26: Approach to the hot swollen - RCP London

Management of acute gout

in end stage renal disease

Commonly glucocorticoids used

Any residual kidney function or peritoneal dialysis:

AVOID NSAIDs

Colchicine is not removed by haemodialysis –

colchicine toxicity

Avoid colchicine if GFR <10ml/min/1.73m2

Page 27: Approach to the hot swollen - RCP London

Gout prophylaxis

Not to be commenced acutely

Can trigger an acute gout flare on commencement

Allopurinol

Usually 300mg/d

100mg/d renal failure

Titrate dose to maintain plasma urate concentration <350micromol/L

Check FBC, UEs

Febuxostat

Others: lesinurad, probenecid, benzbromarone, sulfinpyrazone

Page 28: Approach to the hot swollen - RCP London

CPPD (Pseudogout)

Typically modelled on the treatment of acute gout

Intraarticular steroid injection

NSAIDs

Oral colchicine

Oral glucocorticoids (with a steroid taper)

Prophylaxis

Involve rheumatology – low dose colchicine/NSAIDs

Page 29: Approach to the hot swollen - RCP London

Summary

Septic arthritis: significant mortality

Remember polyarticular septic arthritis

Warfarin/DOACs not a contraindication to needle aspiration

Gout: acute management

NSAIDs

Colchicine

Oral/intra-articular prednisolone

CPPD/pseudogout

Page 30: Approach to the hot swollen - RCP London

References

1. Shmerling RH, Delbanco TL, Tosteson AN, Trentham DE. Synovial fluid tests. What should be ordered? JAMA. 1990;264(8):1009.

2. Jeng GW et al. Measurement of synovial tumor necrosis factor-alpha in diagnosing emergency patients with bacterial arthritis. Am J Emerg Med. 1997;15(7):626

3. Coakley G. et al. BSR & BHPR, BOA, RCGP and BSAC guidelines for management of the hot swollen joint in adults. Rheumatology (2006); 45:1039-1041

4. Dubost JJ et al. Polyarticular septic arthritis. Medicine (1993):72:296-310

5. Ross JJ. Pneumococcal septic arthritis: review of 190 cases. Clin Infect Dis (2003);36:319-27

6. Mathews CJ, Coakley G, Septic arthritis: current diagnostic and therapeutic algorithm. Curr OpinRheumatol. 2008;20(4):457.

7. Anker AU et al. Uric acid and survival in chronic heart failure: validation and application in metabolic, functional, and hemodynamic staging. Circulation. 2003;107(15):1991.