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Gout

Gout is characterized by hyperuricemia and deposition of urate crystals in joints and tissues, causing inflammation. It most commonly affects males over age 40 and is caused by either overproduction or underexcretion of uric acid by the kidneys. Gout progresses through asymptomatic hyperuricemia, acute arthritic attacks, chronic tophaceous gout with urate deposits, and potentially kidney damage. Joints of the feet and hands are usually affected. Diagnosis is made based on clinical features and detection of urate crystals in synovial fluid or tophi. Treatment involves medications to reduce uric acid levels.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
84 views4 pages

Gout

Gout is characterized by hyperuricemia and deposition of urate crystals in joints and tissues, causing inflammation. It most commonly affects males over age 40 and is caused by either overproduction or underexcretion of uric acid by the kidneys. Gout progresses through asymptomatic hyperuricemia, acute arthritic attacks, chronic tophaceous gout with urate deposits, and potentially kidney damage. Joints of the feet and hands are usually affected. Diagnosis is made based on clinical features and detection of urate crystals in synovial fluid or tophi. Treatment involves medications to reduce uric acid levels.

Uploaded by

ahmad shaltout
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Gout

= characterized by derangement of purine metabolism manifested by:

• hyperuricemia
• deposition of positively birefringent monosodium urate monohydrate
crystals in synovial fluid leukocytes
• gross deposits of sodium urate in periarticular soft tissues (synovial
membranes, articular cartilage, ligaments, bursae)
• recurrent episodes of arthritis

P.97

Age >40 years; males (in women gout may occur after menopause)
:
Cause:

• Primary Gout (90%)


Incidence 0.3%; M:F = 20:1; 5% in postmenopausal women
:
• Disturbance:
o overproduction of uric acid due to inborn error of metabolism
o inherited defect in renal urate excretion
o Idiopathic (99%)
 normal urinary excretion (80–90%)
 increased urinary excretion (10–20%)
o Specific enzyme / metabolic defect (1%)
 increased activity of PP-ribose-P synthetase
 partial deficiency of hypoxanthine-guanine
phosphoribosyltransferase
• Secondary Gout (10%)
o Rarely cause for radiographically apparent disease
o increased turnover of nucleic acids:
 Myeloproliferative disorders + sequelae of their
treatment: polycythemia vera, leukemia, lymphoma, multiple
myeloma
 Blood dyscrasias: chronic hemolysis
o increase in purine synthesis de novo due to enzyme defects:
 Glycogen storage disease Type I (von Gierke = glucose-
6-phosphatase deficiency)
 Lesch-Nyhan syndrome (choreoathetosis, spasticity,
mental retardation, self-mutilation of lips + fingertips) due to
absence of hypo-xanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase
o acquired defect in renal excretion of urates (due to reduction in
renal function):
 Chronic renal failure
 Drugs, toxins: lead poisoning
 Endocrinologic: myxedema, hypo- /
hyperparathyroidism
 Vascular: myocardial infarction, hypertension
Histo tophus (PATHOGNOMONIC LESION) composed of crystalline / amorphous
: urates surrounded by highly vascularized inflammatory tissue rich in
histiocytes, lymphocytes, fibroblasts, foreign-body giant cells (similar to a
foreign-body granuloma)
Clinical stages in chronologic order:

• Asymptomatic hyperuricemia
• Acute gouty arthritis
o Gout accounts for 5% of all cases of arthritis
Precipitated trauma, surgery, alcohol, dietary indiscretion, systemic
by: infection
o • monoarticular (90%)
o • polyarticular (10%): any joint may be affected
Prognosis usually self-limited (pain resolving within a few hours /
: days) without treatment
• Chronic tophaceous gout
o = multiple large urate deposits in intraarticular, extraarticular,
intraosseous location
Prevalence: <50% of patients experiencing acute attacks; M:F = 20:1
Histo: cartilage degeneration + destruction, synovial
proliferation + pannus, destruction of sub-articular bone +
proliferation of marginal bone
Distribution symmetric polyarticular disease (resembling rheumatoid
: arthritis), asymmetric polyarticular disease, monoarticular
disease
o • more severe prolonged attacks
o • may ulcerate expressing whitish chalky material
Cx tendon rupture, nerve compression / paralysis
:
• Gouty nephropathy / nephrolithiasis
o Acute urate nephropathy
o Uric acid urolithiasis
 May precede arthritis in up to 20% of cases!
 • renal hypertension
 • isosthenuria (inability to concentrate urine)
 • proteinuria
 • pyelonephritis

Cx increased incidence of calcium oxalate stones (urate crystals


: serve as a nidus)
Location:

• joints: hands + feet (1st MTP joint most commonly affected = podagra)
> ankles > heels > wrists (carpometacarpal compartment especially common
and severe) > fingers > elbows; knees; shoulder; sacroiliac joint (15%,
unilateral);
o involvement of hip + spine is rare
• bones, tendon, bursa, bones
• external ear; pressure points over elbow, forearms, knees, feet
• Radiologic features usually not seen until 6–12 years after initial
attack
• Radiologic features present in 45% of inflicted patients
• @ Soft tissues
o eccentric juxtaarticular lobulated soft-tissue masses (hand, foot,
ankle, elbow, knee)
Site tendency for extensor tendons, eg, quadriceps, triceps, Achilles
: tendon
o calcific deposits in periphery of gouty tophi in 50% (sodium
urate crystals are not radiopaque, tophi radiographically visible only
after calcium deposition of an underlying abnormality of calcium
metabolism)
o bilateral effusion of bursae olecrani (PATHOGNOMONIC),
prepatellar bursa
o aural calcification
• @ Joints
o joint effusion (earliest sign)
o periarticular swelling (in acute monoarticular gout)
o preservation of joint space until late in disease (IMPORTANT
CLUE):
 cartilage destruction (late in course of disease)
o absence of periarticular demineralization (due to short duration
of attacks; important DDx for rheumatoid arthritis)
o eccentric erosions with thin sclerotic margins:
 scalloped erosion of bases of ulnar metacarpals
o chondrocalcinosis (5%):
Location menisci (fibrocartilage only)
:
 Patients with gout have a predisposition for calcium
pyrophosphate dihydrate deposition disease (CPPD)

P.98

Cx secondary osteoarthritis
:

o round / oval well-marginated subarticular cysts (pseudotumor)


up to 3 cm (containing tophus / urate crystal-rich fluid)
DDx rheumatoid arthritis (marginal erosions without sclerotic rim,
: periarticular demineralization)
• @ Bone
o “punched-outâ€‌ lytic bone lesion ‫آ‬± sclerosis of margin =
“mouse / rat biteâ€‌ from erosion of long-standing soft-tissue tophus
o “overhanging marginâ€‌ (40%) = elevated osseous spicule
separating tophaceous nodule from adjacent erosion (in intra- and
extraarticular locations) (HALLMARK)
o proliferative bone changes:
 club-shaped metatarsals, metacarpals, phalanges
 enlargement of ulnar styloid process
 diaphyseal thickening
o ischemic necrosis of femoral / humeral heads
o intraosseous calcification:
 punctate / circular calcifications of subchondral /
subligamentous regions (DDx: enchondroma)
 bone infarction due to deposits at vascular basement
membrane (DDx: bone island)
• @ Kidney
o renal stones (in up to 20%):
 pure uric acid stones (84%): radiolucent on radiographs,
hyperdense on CT
 uric acid + calcium oxalate (4%)
 pure calcium oxalate / calcium phosphate (12%)
• MR:
o tophus (most frequently) isointense to muscle on T1WI
o low or intermediate signal intensity on T2WI
o homogeneous intense enhancement

Rx colchicine, allopurinol (effective treatment usually does not improve


: roentgenograms)
DDx:

• CPPD (pseudogout symptomatology, polyarticular chondrocalcinosis


involving hyaline and fibrocartilage + degenerative arthropathy with joint
space narrowing)
• Psoriasis (progressive joint space destruction, paravertebral
ossification, sacroiliac joint involvement)
• Rheumatoid arthritis (nonproliferative marginal bone erosions,
fusiform soft-tissue swelling, symmetric distribution, early joint-space
narrowing, osteopenia)
• Joint infection (rapid destruction of joint space, loss of articular cortex
over a continuous segment)
• Amyloidosis (bilateral symmetric involvement, periarticular
osteopenia)
• Xanthomatosis (laboratory work-up)
• Osteoarthritis (symmetric distribution, elderly women)

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