Arthritis

(Redirigido desde «Joint Pain»)

Background

  • Arthritis refers to joint inflammation, characterized by pain, swelling, warmth, and decreased range of motion[1]
  • The primary EM concern is ruling out septic arthritis, which is a joint emergency requiring urgent drainage
  • Classification by number of joints involved helps narrow the differential:
    • Monoarticular (1 joint): septic arthritis, crystal disease, hemarthrosis — see Monoarticular arthritis
    • Oligoarticular (2-4 joints): reactive arthritis, seronegative spondyloarthropathy, gonococcal arthritis
    • Polyarticular (≥5 joints): rheumatoid arthritis, viral arthritis, SLE, rheumatic fever
    • Migratory: rheumatic fever, gonococcal arthritis, viral
  • Key distinction: inflammatory (warm, swollen, worse with rest, morning stiffness >30 min) vs. non-inflammatory/mechanical (worse with activity, minimal swelling, no morning stiffness)

Clinical Features

History

  • Number and pattern of joints involved
  • Acute vs. chronic onset
  • Symmetric vs. asymmetric distribution
  • Morning stiffness: >30-60 minutes suggests inflammatory arthritis
  • Recent infection: pharyngitis (post-strep/rheumatic fever), GI illness (reactive arthritis), STI (gonococcal)
  • Skin findings: rash, psoriasis, tophi, dermatitis-arthritis syndrome
  • Eye symptoms: conjunctivitis (reactive arthritis), uveitis (ankylosing spondylitis)
  • Trauma history
  • Family history of autoimmune disease
  • Medication history: diuretics, cyclosporine (gout risk)

Physical Exam

  • Joint warmth, swelling, effusion, tenderness
  • Range of motion (active and passive)
  • Pain with passive ROM suggests intra-articular pathology
  • Periarticular tenderness without effusion suggests bursitis/tendinitis (periarticular, not articular)
  • Skin: tophi (gout), dactylitis (psoriatic arthritis), rash, nail pitting (psoriasis)
  • Mucocutaneous lesions (gonococcal — pustules on palms/soles, tenosynovitis)
  • Heart murmur (endocarditis, rheumatic fever)

Red Flags

  • Hot, swollen, single joint = septic until proven otherwise → arthrocentesis
  • Fever with joint complaints (septic arthritis, endocarditis)
  • Prosthetic joint with new pain/swelling (prosthetic joint infection)
  • IV drug use + joint pain (hematogenous seeding)
  • Polyarthritis + new murmur (endocarditis)
  • Pediatric arthritis + fever + rash (consider Kawasaki disease, rheumatic fever, JIA)

Differential Diagnosis

Monoarticular arthritis

Algorithm for Monoarticular arthralgia

Oligoarthritis

Polyarthritis

Algorithm for Polyarticular arthralgia

Migratory Arthritis

Evaluation

Monoarticular (Most Critical Workup)

  • Arthrocentesis — perform on any acute hot, swollen joint
    • Synovial fluid: cell count, Gram stain, culture, crystal analysis
    • WBC >50,000 with >90% PMNs = presumed septic until culture results
    • Crystals: negatively birefringent (gout), positively birefringent (pseudogout)
    • Note: crystals do NOT rule out co-existing infection — always send cultures
  • Blood cultures
  • CBC, ESR, CRP
  • Uric acid (may be normal during acute gout flare)
  • X-ray of affected joint

Polyarticular

  • CBC, BMP, ESR, CRP
  • Rheumatoid factor, anti-CCP (rheumatoid arthritis)
  • ANA (SLE)
  • GC/CT NAAT, blood cultures if infectious etiology suspected
  • Hepatitis B/C, parvovirus B19 serologies if viral arthritis suspected
  • ASO titer if rheumatic fever suspected
  • X-rays of affected joints
  • Consider echocardiography if endocarditis suspected

Management

Septic Arthritis

Crystal Arthropathy

Inflammatory/Autoimmune

  • NSAIDs for symptomatic relief
  • Rheumatology consultation/referral
  • Specific management depends on underlying diagnosis

Gonococcal Arthritis

Disposition

Admit

  • Septic arthritis (for surgical drainage and IV antibiotics)
  • Prosthetic joint infection
  • Endocarditis
  • Severe systemic inflammatory process
  • New rheumatic fever

Discharge

  • Crystal arthropathy with adequate pain control
  • Viral arthritis
  • Known autoimmune arthritis with mild flare
  • Arrange rheumatology follow-up for new polyarthritis
  • Return precautions: fever, worsening joint swelling, new joint involvement, inability to bear weight

See Also

External Links

References

  1. Ross JJ. Septic Arthritis of Native Joints. Infect Dis Clin North Am. 2017 Jun;31(2):203-218. PMID 28366221