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Monoarticular Arthritis
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Monoarticular Arthritis
, Monoarthritis, Monoarticular Joint Pain, Acute Monoarthritis
See Also
Joint Pain
Joint Pain in Children
Polyarticular Arthritis
Fever in Rheumatic Disease
Viral Causes of Arthritis
Cutaneous Signs of Rheumatic Disease
Enteropathic Arthritis
Synovial Fluid White Blood Cell Count
Ocular Manifestations of Rheumatologic Disease
Rheumatologic Conditions affecting the Foot
Rheumatologic Conditions affecting the Hand
Rheumatologic Conditions affecting the Hip
Rheumatologic Conditions affecting the Knee
Rheumatologic Conditions affecting the Low Back
Rheumatologic Conditions affecting the Wrist
XRay Changes in Rheumatic Conditions
Septic Joint
Definitions
Acute Monoarthritis
Acute single joint inflammation developing in <2 weeks
Pitfalls
Septic Joint
Septic Arthritis
is a rheumatologic emergency
Infection may destroy a joint in 48 hours
Mortality is as high as 7 to 20%, especially in advanced age
Septic Arthritis
presentations may be subtle (no fever, no erythema)
Consider
Septic Arthritis
in any patient with painful, significantly limited joint range of motion
Arthrocentesis
is the only absolutely reliable method to exclude
Septic Joint
No blood test (including elevated
Uric Acid
level or normal
WBC Count
, CRP) excludes
Septic Arthritis
Chronically deranged joint is higher risk for
Septic Arthritis
(differentiate
Septic Joint
from acute exacerbation)
Do NOT start
Antibiotic
s prior to
Arthrocentesis
, and DO initiate
Antibiotic
s afterward if findings suggest
See exceptions under management below (e.g.
Septic Shock
)
Causes
Common Monoarticular (Mnemonic: SINGL JOINT)
Septic Arthritis
(most important to rule-out)
Bacterial Arthritis
Fungal
Arthritis
Parasitic
Arthritis
Gonococcal Arthritis
(esp. young sexually active adults)
Mycobacteria
Internal derangement
Meniscus Injury
Ligament tears
Overuse syndromes
Inflammatory
Arthritis
- Aseptic (e.g.
Spondyloarthropathy
,
Reactive Arthritis
)
Neuropathy
(
Charcot's Joint
)
Gout
,
Pseudogout
and other crystal-induced
Arthritis
Lyme Disease
Juvenile or adult
Rheumatoid Arthritis
Osteoarthritis
Osteomyelitis
Ischemic bone (avascular necrosis)
Neoplasms
Osteoid Osteoma
Pigmented Villonodular synovitis
Bony metastases
Trauma
Overuse injury
Fracture
s
Hemarthrosis
Causes
Gene
ral
Common and important Monoarthritis in Primary Care
Osteoarthritis
Gouty Arthritis
Pseudogout
Trauma
(e.g. foreign body,
Fracture
, hemarthrosis, osteonecrosis)
Septic Arthritis
Lyme Disease
Autoimmune Condition
s or
Vasculitis
(typically
Polyarthritis
)
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
Rheumatoid Arthritis
Sarcoidosis
Spondyloarthropathy
(typically
Polyarthritis
)
Ankylosing Spondylitis
Spondyloarthopathy due to
Inflammatory Bowel Disease
related
Psoriatic Arthritis
Reactive Arthritis
Miscellaneous causes
Acute Retroviral Syndrome
(initial
HIV Presentation
)
Behcet Syndrome
Hemoglobinopathy
Familial Mediterranean
Fever
Osteitis Deformans
(
Paget's Disease
)
Still Disease
Bacterial Endocarditis
Amyloidosis
Malignancy
Coagulopathy
Hypothyroidism
Hypoparathyroidism
History
See
Joint Pain
Predisposing factors
Pre-existing
Osteoarthritis
or
Rheumatoid Arthritis
Septic Arthritis
Prolonged
Corticosteroid
use
Septic Arthritis
Avascular necrosis
Tick Bite
Lyme Disease
IV Drug Abuse
, Immunodepression
Septic Arthritis
Timing of pain and swelling
Extremely rapid onset within minutes
Trauma
tic
Arthritis
(e.g.
Fracture
)
Onset over hours to days
Septic Arthritis
Crystal
Arthritis
(e.g. gout)
Onset over weeks to months
Systemic Rheumatic disease
Indolent infection
Osteoarthritis
Tumor
Chronic or Long-standing
Aggravated
Osteoarthritis
Crystal
Arthritis
Mediating factors
Worsens with activity and improves with rest
Mechanical cause (
Trauma
,
Osteoarthritis
)
Morning Stiffness and worse with rest
Inflammatory
Arthritis
(e.g.
Rheumatoid Arthritis
)
Location
Migratory
Gonococcal Arthritis
(
Gonorrhea
) initially migratory, but later affects primary joint)
Rheumatic Fever
Consider multiple joint involvement
Oligoarthritis
(<=4 joints)
Polyarthritis
History
Extraarticular Symptoms
See
Joint Pain
See Differential Diagnosis below
Symptoms
See
Joint Pain
Joint Pain
and swelling
Signs
Joint effusion
Most specific sign of intraarticular process and joint inflammation
Distinguish articular from periarticular conditions
Bursitis
Fracture
Tendonitis
Range of motion
Consider
Septic Arthritis
in any patient with painful, significantly limited joint range of motion
Active range of motion limitation
Periarticular problems
Both Passive AND Active range of motion limitation
Articular problems
Normal joint exam
Referred pain
Palpation
Swelling and pain
Stress Pain (pain at extreme range of motion)
Most sensitive sign of joint inflammation
Examine all joints
Assess for
Polyarthritis
Skin exam
Psoriatic
Plaque
,
Nail Pitting
or
Dactylitis
Overlying
Cellulitis
or
Septic Bursitis
Skin
Desquamation
over joint (
Gouty Arthritis
)
Erythema Nodosum
(
Sarcoidosis
,
Inflammatory Bowel Disease
)
Erythema over joint
Infection (
Cellulitis
,
Septic Bursitis
,
Septic Joint
)
Crystal
Arthritis
(e.g.
Gouty Arthritis
)
Labs
See
Joint Pain
Arthrocentesis
Single most important test to consider (critical if possible
Septic Joint
)
See
Synovial Fluid White Blood Cell Count
Imaging
See
Joint Pain
Plain film XRay
Indicated for
Trauma
or focal bone pain
Acute findings include
Fracture
or avulsion
Subacute findings include
Osteomyelitis
or malignancy
Chronic findings seen in
Osteoarthritis
,
Rheumatoid Arthritis
, or
Gouty Arthritis
Differential Diagnosis
Septic Arthritis
See Pitfalls above (most important to exclude)
Risks include prosthetic joints, joint surgery, RA, CKD, DM,
IVDA
,
Skin Infection
, age over 80 years old
Includes
Gonococcal Arthritis
(esp. sexually active young patients)
Osteoarthritis
Asymmetric
Joint Pain
and stiffness in the hands, spine, knees and hips
Brief morning stiffness (<30 min), and
Joint Pain
after activity
Heberden's Node
(DIP),
Bouchard's Node
(PIP) are pathognomonic (1st MCP is commonly affected)
Gouty Arthritis
Thiazide Diuretic
s,
Purine
s and
Trauma
may trigger gouty attacks
Rapidly developing red, swollen joints (esp. 1st MTP)
With chronic gout, tophi destroy joints
Renal stones may form
Behcet Syndrome
Oral Ulcer
s
Reiter's Syndrome
Urethritis
Conjunctivitis
Diarrhea
Rash
Psoriatic Arthritis
Psoriasis
Nail Pitting
Dactylitis
(sausage-like swelling of digits)
Ankylosing Spondylitis
Uveitis
Low Back Pain
Sarcoidosis
Hilar Adenopathy
Erythema Nodosum
Gonococcal Arthritis
Young adults with high risk sex history
Urethra
l discharge or
Dysuria
(
Pharyngitis
may also be present)
Migratory polyarthralgias at onset, then settles in a single joint
Tenosynovitis of hands and feet
Pustule
s
Hemarthrosis (
Coagulopathy
)
Bleeding tendency
Anticoagulant
use
Avascular Necrosis
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
Corticosteroid
use
Alcohol Abuse
References
Mann and Papp (2022) Crit Dec Emerg Med 36(17): 22-8
Becker (2016) Am Fam Physician 94(10):810-6 [PubMed]
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