Term
____ & ____ are present during an acute phase response. Also important to help monitor treatment response. |
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Definition
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Term
ESR Increases during the _____ _____ _____ |
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Definition
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Term
_____ measures the distance erythrocytes fall through plasma in a Westergren or Wintrobe tube over one hour (measured in mm/hr) |
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Definition
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Term
ESR Elevations seen in an _____ conditions |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
ESR False increases can occur with ...(3) |
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Definition
inc age, obesity, and female sex |
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Term
ESR May remain ____ even beyond the resolution of an inflammatory response. So You need to interpret ESR with caution |
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Definition
increased (50% inc after 1 week of inflammation resolution) |
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Term
CRP Increases in the___ ___ ___ |
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Definition
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Term
Rise and fall of CRP are more ____ than the ESR |
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Definition
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Term
CRP Early elevation occurs within ___ hours; and, peaks __ - __ hrs |
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Definition
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Term
(3)... can produce false CRP positives |
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Definition
Cigarette smoking, diabetes, and age |
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Term
Just because a patient has a normal ESR and/or CRP doesn’t mean that the patient does not have an inflammatory disorder (ie. 10% of patients with RA have normal ESR; 20% of patients with Polymyalgia Rheumatica have normal ESR; Patients with active SLE can have normal ESR and CRP) |
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Definition
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Term
____ Present in a wide variety of autoimmune disorders. Its presence or absence is not a predictor if there is or is not a disease |
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Definition
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Term
ANA Can be elevated in ..(4) |
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Definition
Hepatitis C, thyroid disorders, patient’s on multiple medications, and even in healthy patients |
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Term
ANA ____ – measures the proportion of actual positive which are correctly identified as such (e.g. The percentage of sick people who are correctly identified as having the condition) |
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Definition
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Term
ANA ______– measures the proportion of negatives which are correctly identified as such(e.g. the percentage of healthy people who are correctly identified as not having the condition) |
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Definition
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Term
It has a high sensitivity in ___, in which a negative ANA makes the dx of ___ less likely |
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Definition
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Term
Given ANAs low _____ for many inflammatory disorders, it is recommended to only order it if you suspect SLE in a patient based on history and examination |
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Definition
specificity (chances patient is negative for the disease if ANA is negative) |
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Term
ANa is found in __-__% of healthy people |
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Definition
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Term
____ is a weak test for polymyositis, dermatomyositis, RA, and Sjogren’s syndrome |
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Definition
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Term
_____ is Not a positive predictor of scleroderma, but useful to rule it out (sensitivity of 85%) |
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Definition
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Term
Rheumatoid Factor (RF) = Antibody against the __ portion of Ig__, but in clinical practice it is measured as Ig__. |
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Definition
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Term
RF Role is unclear. May be related to the binding RF on B-Cells to immunoglobulins attached to antigens for antigen presentation, resulting in the _____ of the humoral response |
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Definition
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Term
Sensitivity for RF is around 50-85%, but is ____ over time. |
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Definition
increasing (eg. Initially may be negative and then seroconvert over time) |
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Term
__% of a young healthy population are positive for RF and this rate inc with age |
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Definition
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Term
RF Positive results can be seen in other connective tissue disorders, _____ Syndrome, _____, polymyositis, chronic infections, ____ disorders, and _____. |
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Definition
Sjogren SLE inflammatory malignancy |
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Term
Only ___% of RF patients are positive during early onset ___% of RF patients never test positive Therefore, recommend ordering this test if the setting is right: joint ___ & ____; or, see ___ changes radiographically Over ordering can lead to fear, anxiety, expense, and extensive/inappropriate investigations |
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Definition
50 15 effusions and synovitis erosive |
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Term
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Definition
ANTI-CYCLIC CITRULLINATED PEPTIDE |
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Term
____: An amino acid RA marker since 1964 |
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Definition
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Term
Anti-CCP has a _____ of 90-95%; its major advantage is its *increased ______* It has a ______ of 50-85% |
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Definition
specificity specificity* know for exam sensitivity |
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Term
Anti-CCP May be useful in the prognosis of ___ |
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Definition
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Term
______: Good to help RF diagnosis early in the disease and with the patients who are RF negative |
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Definition
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Term
NSAIDs have ___ and ____ effects, but in higher doses they are used for their ____ effects |
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Definition
analgesic antipyretic anti-inflammatory |
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Term
NSAIDs inhibit the ____ enzymes, thereby inhibiting the formation of _____ and _____ from arachidonic acid; ____ act as messenger molecules in the process of inflammation |
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Definition
cyclooxygenase prostaglandins thromboxane prostaglandins |
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Term
CELEBREX!!!--- what is the advange of celebrex? |
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Definition
COX 2 is good for pt with history of stomach ulcers and reflux They are very exensive.
Blood thinner patients can take COX 2 inhibitors. They have not found Celebrex to mess up heart. NSAID- can cause gastric issues– |
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Term
Celebrex (____ inhibitor generically known as celecoxib) |
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Definition
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Term
If advise the patient to take over the counter ibuprofen, and they are an adult: Take __-__ over the counter ibuprofens __ times a day with food (this is equivalent to 600mg to 800mg 3 times a day) If you write a prescription: Ibuprofen ___mg (or ___mg), one orally ____ with food |
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Definition
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Term
With ANY of the NSAIDs, advise the patient to stop the medication immediately if ____ or ____ and to contact you (_____ less likely to cause this) NSAIDS also have a ______ risk and can cause ______ |
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Definition
stomach upset blood in stool Cox-2 inhibitors cardiovascular peripheral edema |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
Over the counter Naproxen tablet is ___mg (2 tabs are less than one prescribed tablet) I will advise a patient to take __ over the counter Naproxen (Aleve) tablets __ times a day with food When I write a prescription: Naprosyn (or Naproxen, or Naproxen sodium) ___mg, one orally ___ with food |
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Definition
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Term
Mobic is a ____ a day or ______ a day drug It can be written: Mobic ___ mg, take one tablet orally bid with food, or Mobic ___mg, take one tablet orally once a day with food |
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Definition
once or twice 7.5 15* PA Hulsley likes this once a day dosing |
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Term
Diclofenac is a common prescription I see a lot of my patients taking through their primary care provider Diclofenac comes in 2 doses: 50mg and 75mg Recommended dose for Diclofenac is ___mg-___mg/day It is written: Diclofenac 50mg, take one orally bid with food; Diclofenace 50mg, take one orally tid with food; Diclofenac 75mg, take one orally bid with food |
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Definition
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Term
Relafen is another prescription drug I see many primary care providers prescribing to their patients It comes in 500mg and 750mg tablets Recommended starting dose is ____mg/day It can be taken once a day or twice a day To start with the lowest dose you can write the prescription as follows: Relafen 500mg, two tablets orally once a day with food; Relafen 500mg, one tablet orally twice a day with food Use the lowest effective dose to treat chronic inflammation The largest recommended dose is ___ mg/day |
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Definition
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Term
Naprosyn (Naproxen) (ALeve) is an ____ |
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Definition
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Term
Ibuprofen (Motrin) is an ____ |
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Definition
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Term
Mobic (Melxociam) is an _____ |
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Definition
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Term
Diclofenac (Voltaren) is an ____ |
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Definition
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Term
Relafen (Nabumetone) is an ____ |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
_____ is a great drug for patients who cannot tolerate NSAIDS It is generally safe with patients on ____. However, it is very, very, expensive if the patient’s insurance does not cover this medication |
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Definition
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Term
___ is great for perioperative pain, especially in orthopedics However it is contraindicated in perioperative pain with ___. |
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Definition
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Term
Patients with OA or RA: Celebrex ___mg, one orally q day; Celebrex __mg, one orally bid |
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Definition
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Term
Patients with Juvenile RA (age >2) dosing is based on ___. What is great about celebrex, its contents can be mixed with applesauce, but it must be ingested immediately with water. And, stable for up to 6 hrs under refrigerated conditions. Higher doses are used in other conditions: ..(3)... In these cases, up to ___mg/day |
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Definition
weight
Familial Adenomatous Polyposis Primary Dysmenorrhea Ankylosing Spondylitis
400mg |
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Term
Patients who are on long-term treatment with NSAIDS need to have periodic ____ and ___ function tests |
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Definition
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Term
Corticosteroid Side-effects include: ..(3).. Lowest possible dose used |
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Definition
AVN Drug-induced secondary adrenocortical insufficiency (minimize by gradual reduction of the dosage) tendon ruptures |
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Term
Psychic derangements may occur with the use of _____ |
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Definition
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Term
In children, corticosteroids can affect __ & ___ |
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Definition
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Term
Corticosteroid Injectables can be ____ to articular cartilage if over-used |
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Definition
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Term
CORTICOSTEROIDS FYI
Can cause weight gain with long term use Water retention Osteoporosis GI problems Impaired wound healing May suppress reactions to skin tests Do not use if getting flu shot (wait a few weeks) Can cause convulsions (lower seizure threshhold) Do not give to patients with glaucoma Careful in the diabetic patient |
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Definition
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Term
I use Medrol Dose Pack or a tapered dose of Prednisone to treat my patients who may have an acute flare of radiculitis To prescribe Medrol Dose Pack: Medrol Dose Pack, take as directed, Disp: #1 (one), ___ refill To prescribe Prednisone: Prednisone ___ mg, take 4 orally x 3 days, then 3 orally x 3 days, then 2 orally x 3 days, then one orally x 3 days Disp: #___, no refill |
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Definition
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Term
I use a combination of a steroid and a lidocaine medicine in a ___cc syringe I use a __ gauge 1 ½ inch length needle (when I aspirate I use an __ gauge needle 1 ½ inch length needle) I usually inject 5cc of xylocaine 2% without _____* mixed with 1cc of kenalog, dexamethazone, or celestone |
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Definition
10 22 18 epinephrine* remember for test |
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Term
VISCOSUPPLEMENTATION: she uses _____ or ______ |
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Definition
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Term
SynviscOne is a ____ injection, and no need to return to the clinic each week for 2 more subsequent injections (the original Synvisc) Supartz is a ___ weeks series of injections Both are made from the combs of _____ Make sure patient is not allergic to ___ or ___ |
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Definition
one time 5 chickens eggs or chickens |
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Term
ON FINAL: Need to know the order of treating arthritis: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. |
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Definition
1.) nothing, just watch 2.) Oral antiiflammatories and or physical therapy 3.) Corticosteroid injection 4.) Viscosupplementation 5.)if pain is bad enough, then surgery (total knee replacement/total knee arthroplasty, or arthroscopy) |
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Term
DISEASE MODIFYING RHEUMATIC DRUGS: These drugs help ____ the joint destruction process of the disease |
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Definition
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Term
DISEASE MODIFYING RHEUMATIC DRUGS: Used to treat certain forms of ____ arthritis including RA, anklylosing spondylitis, and psoriatic arthritis Also used to treat ____ and ______, and to reduce the risk of rejection of a transplanted organ |
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Definition
inflammatory cancer inflammatory bowel disease |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
The most commonly prescribed drug in the DMARDS class is _____ since the early 80’s |
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Definition
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Term
______ is an effective first-line treatment among the DMARDS class of drugs |
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Definition
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Term
Methotrexate has ________(ie. Higher doses for worse disease) Easy to monitor by testing liver function and blood counts Reduce side effects by taking daily ________ |
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Definition
dose flexibility
folic acid |
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Term
____ was the mainstay for DMARDS treatment of RA from the 1920’s to the mid 1980’s Reduces inflammation in the joints, but not sure of the mechanism to do this Injectable into the ____ better than ___ form |
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Definition
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Term
______ is a drug used to treat malaria. They found this drug to help RA patients when these patients were taking the drug for malaria and they found an improvement in their arthritic symptoms. Usually used with other DMARDs. Given by mouth daily Need to see ____ ___counts may dec, blood and protein in urine may occur (check labs frequently) |
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Definition
Plaquenil (hydroxychloroquine) opthalmologist (retina problems are rare but recommend see doc) WBC |
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Term
Plaquenil (hydroxychloroquine) is an .. |
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Definition
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Term
Arava (leflunomide) is an.... |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
Azulfidine (sulfasalazine) is an .... |
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Definition
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Term
Imuran (azathioprine) is an... |
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Definition
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Term
Cytoxan (cyclophosphamide) is an... |
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Definition
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Term
Biologic Drugs: Genetically engineered ____ derived from human genes |
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Definition
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Term
Biologic Drugs ____specific components of the immune system involved with the inflammatory process Used to treat moderate to severe______ that has not responded to other treatments Helps prevent long-term disability of RA |
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Definition
Inhibit rheumatoid arthritis |
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Term
Less than 30% of patients taking biologic drugs may develop ___ at injection site Inc risk for ____ and other diseases |
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Definition
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Term
Should not receive ______ while taking biologics May cause dormant disease to flare (ie ___) – test for this prior to starting drug |
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Definition
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Term
Do not give biologics to patients with ___ or ___ |
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Definition
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Term
Biologics are Very expensive Given by injection or IV infusion; no oral form (but, they are working on this) Not sure how will affect human pregnancy (animal studies show they are safe in animals) Stop biologics prior to surgery and until wounds heal and risk for infection has passed |
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Definition
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Term
Remicade, Enbrel, Humira, Cimzia, and Simponi reduce inflmmation and damage from RA by blocking a chemical activator of inflammation called _______ |
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Definition
tumor necrosis factor (TNF) |
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Term
______ the first interleukin-6 inhibitor for RA |
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Definition
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Term
____ blocks the action of the chemical messanger interleukin-1 in RA |
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Definition
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Term
_____ blocks signals needed to activate T-cells of the immune system |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
____– Given to patients who have not responded to TNF-blockers. It targets and reduces the number of specialized white blood cells, called B cells, in the blood. |
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Definition
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Term
______ should not be used to treat arthritis or inflammatory disorders I see many primary care providers prescribing too many of these pain meds to patients |
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Definition
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Term
HOWEVER, ONCE AGAIN: A patient with an ACUTE flare or an ACUTE injury – DO NOT BE AFRAID to prescribe a ____ pain medicine. You will have a very, very unhappy patient. |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
Tylenol is over the counter and comes in ____mg tablets You can advise a patient to take __ tablets over the counter __ times a day |
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Definition
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Term
It is o.k. to take Tylenol with another _____ – I advise this often It is for pain, but also an anti-pyretic |
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Definition
anti-inflammatory (NSAID or steroid) |
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Term
_____ is for moderate pain I used this as a step-down medication from the narcotic pain meds. |
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Definition
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Term
DO NOT GIVE TRAMADOL TO A PATIENT WITH A H/O OF _____ |
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Definition
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Term
To prescribe: Tramadol __mg, one to two orally every 4-6 hours, prn pain ____ is the same, but with acetominophen, and prescribed just like Tramadol above |
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Definition
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Term
I use Tylenol #3 with codeine for kids, or even adults who cannot swallow pills It is indicated for mild to moderately severe pain Tylenol #3 with codeine has 300mg of acetaminophen and 30 mg of No. 3 Codeine Phosphate Tylenol #4 with codeine has 300mg of acetaminophen and 60 mg of No. 4 Codeine Phosphate |
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Definition
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Term
Prescribing Tylenol with codeine for children is determined by ____. Prescribing for an adult: Tylenol #3 with codeine, one or two tablets every 6 hours, prn pain, no refills Prescribing for an adult: Tylenol #4 with codeine, one tablet every 6 hours, prn pain, no refills Do not exceed >___mg of Codeine and >____mg of acetaminophen per day |
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Definition
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Term
I commonly prescribe Vicodin and Darvocet N-100 Vicodin is indicated for mild to moderately severe pain Vicodin has 5mg (but can go up to 10mg – known as Norco) of ____, and 500mg of ____ Lortab is also ____, and when I prescribe this it is 7.5mg of ____, and 500mg of ____ |
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Definition
hydrocodone acetaminophen hydrocodone hydrocodone acetaminophen |
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Term
So, what makes me decide on what I prescribe to my patients If the patient has abnormal liver functions you will want to prescribe a drug with less ____ If the patient has a really, really bad liver you can prescribe another drug called _____, which is vicodin and ibuprofen (no acetaminophen), but then you want to make sure the patient has a good ____ status |
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Definition
acetaminophen vicoprofen kidney |
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Term
Inflammatory Disorder: There is destruction of a ___- due to significant amount of inflammatory cells that attack the joint May cause constitutional symptoms such as low grade fever, malaise, weight loss, fatigue Damage to _____ may ensue ______ is a common outcome Death can also occur |
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Definition
joint internal organs Disability |
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Term
Inflammatory disorders: (6) |
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Definition
Rheumatoid Arthritis Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Psoriatic Arthritis Gout Infectious Arthritis Ankylosing Spondylitis |
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Term
_____ disease is central to RA with a background of constitutional and internal manifestations |
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Definition
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Term
RA can affect just the joints, but can also become ____; CAUSE IS UNKNOWN. |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
is to slow down or stop its progression, improve the patients quality of life, and decrease signs and symptoms of the disease |
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Term
_____ factors may play a 50% role in the development of RA, but it is thought that if you are ...... |
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Definition
Genetic
are genetically-predisposed you then need to come in contact with an environmental agent, which initiates the self-perpetuating inflammation that is characteristic of RA |
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Term
_____ Symptoms of RA– Fatigue, malaise, viral-type feeling, joint pain, swelling/stiffness/tenderness, mild limitation in function and joint ROM |
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Definition
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Term
_____ Symptoms of RA– inc fatigue, weight loss, overall dysfunction, joint damage and erosions, joint space narrowing, internal organ damage with severe disease, shortened life span unless disease is suppressed |
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Definition
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Term
RA More common in _____ prior to age 60, but equal in both sexes after 60 |
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Definition
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Term
30% of RA patients developed RA after ___ years old |
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Definition
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Term
The most common body parts affected by RA include the ____ and the ___(x-rays can help in diagnosis of ____ that are small punched-out areas of the bone and cartilage; joint space narrowing; and thinning of the bones around joints called ______) |
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Definition
hands feet erosions juxtarticular osteoporosis |
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Term
To prevent joint damage and dysfunction (within the first 2-3 months after disease onset) patient needs to take _____ Treatment with _____may continue for 5 years and possibly throughout the patient’s life |
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Definition
DMARDs DMARDs
(however notes say to first treat w/ NSAID then DARMD) |
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Term
Using a DMARD and an NSAID are commonly used for ____. Fairly safe and effective. |
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Definition
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Term
Short course of a ___ if significant inflammation and functional limitation in RA PT and _____ is a must Patient education (for patient and family) |
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Definition
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Term
The goal for early treatment of RA is to avoid _____ However, ____can really help an RA patient who has progressed to the stages of hand and feet deformities, joint erosions and destruction, neurological symtoms If not treated quickly: 80% of patients will develop joint erosions within 2 years; if untreated 50% stop work within 5-10 years of the onset; quality of life diminished significantly |
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Definition
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Term
SLE Presents with ____-like symptoms |
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Definition
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Term
____ is a chronic, inflammatory autoimmune disorder (over-active immune response that attacks otherwise healthy cells and tissue) |
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Definition
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Term
SLE Can affect the ___ and ___ small joints |
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Definition
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Term
SLE Affects women 8-9x more than men Occurs at any age, but appears most commonly between 20-45 years of age More frequent in AA, and Chinese/Japanese decent |
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Definition
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Term
SLE has manifestations such as fever, rash, kidney (bx kidney and U/A for casts and PRO in urine) and heart involvement, pleurisy (may get chest x-ray for heart/lungs) and blood test abnormalities (ie dec wbc, dec rbc, dec platelet count) |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
Some drugs can cause drug-induced ____ |
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Definition
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Term
Most common SLE symptom is _____ and most develop arthritis (fingers, hands, wrists, and knees most commonly affected) |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
SLE Treatment aimed at controlling symptoms Mild disease may only involve rash, headaches, fever, arthritis, pleurisy, and pericarditis – treat with ___ and topical ____ Sometimes for mild to moderate disease use ____ and low dose oral ____ |
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Definition
NSAIDs corticosteroids
Plaquenil corticosteroids |
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Term
Severe or life-threatening SLE problems will definitely need care from the rheumatologist and specialist in the areas of system involvement Higher dose requirement of steroids may be needed, as well as some ____ drugs (like methotrexate, Imuran) |
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Definition
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Term
10 year survival rate for SLE is greater than 85% |
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Definition
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Term
There is a ____ lupus, which is isolated to the skin. Painless, do not itch, but scarring can cause permanent hair loss (alopecia) |
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Definition
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Term
Over half of patients develop a red, flat facial rash over the bridge of their nose, called the “______” The rash is painless and does not itch Rash is _____ and if exposed to sunlight the rash can worsen as well as the systemic problems of SLE With treatment this rash can heal without scarring |
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Definition
butterfly rash photosensitive |
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Term
SLE Patients can get myositis, vasculitis, pericarditis, pleuritis, kidney failure psychosis, seizures, and even a coma |
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Definition
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Term
Some people with SLE can get ________: Blood supply to the fingers and/or toes becomes compromised upon exposure to cold, causing blanching, whitish and/or bluish discoloration Pain and numbness in the exposed fingers and toes may occur |
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Definition
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Term
SLE Diagnosis is based on ____ criteria established by the American Rheumatism Association criteria are based on many of the symptoms we already discussed However, often times patients will have only 4 of the criteria, which can still suggest the disease |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
“Butterfly rash” discoid skin rash photosensitivity mucous membrane ulcers arthritis pleuritis pericarditis kidney problems brain irritation blood-count abnormalities immunologic disorder antinuclear antibody positive
don't know why there are 12 listed |
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Term
_______:A noncontagious common skin condition that causes rapid skin cell production resulting in red, dry patches of thickened skin |
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Definition
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Term
Psoriasis: The skin appear to have ____ Common at the posterior elbow, anterior knees, and at the scalp |
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Definition
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Term
When I was working in family medicine it was a common reason for ____ otitis due to the psoriasis rash found in the external ear canal |
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Definition
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Term
Psoriasis Affects 2% of the ____ US population |
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Definition
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Term
5-10% of patients with psoriasis develop psoriatic arthritis Occurs in the 4th or 5th decade and affect male and females equally The skin disease precedes psoriatic arthritis in nearly 80% of patients, but the arthritis may precede psoriasis in 15% of patients A systemic rheumatic disease Cause is unknown ___ gene is found in 50% of cases that have spine arthritis |
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Definition
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Term
PSORIATIC ARTHRITIS Involves ____, ____ extremity joints in an _____ pattern Involves joints at the ____ of the fingers, a finding not seen in RA, such as prominent swelling and deformities of the distal interphalangeal joints, and ____ changes |
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Definition
large lower asymmetrical tips nail |
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Term
psoriatic arthritis May develop low back pain and stiffness Can cause tendonitis and synovitis Can affect lungs (pleuritis), eyes (iritis and blindness), and aorta leading to heart failure It can mimic __ |
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Definition
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Term
psoriatic arthritis: Utilize x-rays, joint aspirations, HLA-B27, ESR, and RF |
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Definition
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Term
psoriatic arthritis Treatments include exercise and NSAIDs, topical steroids for the rash, plaquenil, DMARDs, oral steroids |
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Definition
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Term
Psoriatic arthritis x ray findings: Distal head of a bone becomes ____ appearing as if it has been sharpened and the adjacent bone has become “_____” Occurs at the ___ joint
*know this for exam |
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Definition
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Term
pencil in a cup is an x ray finding of ___ |
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Definition
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Term
Gout Patients generally state the pain began when they first .... |
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Definition
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Term
Gout patients They may have a history of increased ____ ingestion or ingestion of foods high in ___ They may be on ___ |
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Definition
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Term
Gout: If there is an effusion you can aspirate the knee and send the fluid for _____ analysis However, be careful. Do not just assume patient has gout. I ask questions about sexual activity, fevers, chills, night sweats; and, run every lab I can think of on the aspirate) Do this to rule out ____ |
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Definition
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Term
I do not inject a steroid into the gouty knee unless I am absolutely sure that this is gout (ie. I trust the patient and know his history really well) Labs I run on these patients’ aspirates include: cell count with diff, gram stain, anaerobic/aerobic, AFB, fungal, gonorrhea, uric acid crystal analysis I also get a CBC with diff, ESR and CRP; and, sometimes other labs to help r/o other rheumatoid/autoimmune disorders |
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Definition
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Term
_____ Xrays of the hand show oval periarticular erosions There will be sclerotic borders and will often have overhanging edges |
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Definition
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Unlike classic rheumatoid arthritis, in early gout, hand and wrist joints will have ____ joint spaces and normal mineralization |
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Definition
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Gout Diagnosis is confirmed by the finding of ___ in joint fluid |
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Definition
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*Gout Treatment is with ___, ___, and ___for acute episodes *Long-term prophylactic treatment is with ____ or ____
*know for test! |
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Definition
NSAIDs steroids colchicine
allopurinol probenecid |
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Term
_____ for gout increases uric acid excretion in urine Start once an acute gouty attack has subsided However, do not stop or change the dosage of if pt develops a gouty attack. Just make sure the patient is put on ____ or other drug to take care of the acute attack |
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Definition
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Prescription: Probenecid 500mg, ½ tab orally bid x 1 week, and then one tablet orally bid thereafter |
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Definition
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Gout: Check _____ function, because if glomerular filtration rate is 30mL/min or less then probenecid may not be effective You can increase the probenecid dose slowly every 4 weeks to a max of 2000mg/day if needed May increase if symptoms are not under control or the 24 hour uric acid excretion is not above 700mg Want ____ urine |
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Definition
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When acute gouty attacks subside (absent for ___ months) and serum uric acid levels remain normal you can then decrease the probenecid dose every 6 months by 500mg As soon as the serum uric acid levels even slightly rise you need to keep the patient at the next higher dose to maintain normal levels Treat children by weight and it is contraindicated in children less than __ years of age |
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Definition
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Treatment for gout with ____ will block uric acid production NOT for acute attack |
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Definition
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Prophylactic gout treatment is ____ Can be used in patients with poor ____ function because it is not a uricosuric However, dosing is complex and patients may be hypersensitive to it Side effects are rare, but when occur they can be dramatic: Examples include, Stevens-Johnson Syndrome, toxic epidermal necrolysis, which are both life threatening |
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Definition
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Term
Prescription starts with: Allopurinol 100mg, one orally q day However, may increase 100mg each week, and can max to 800mg a day, or until the uric acid levels are under control (6mg/dL or less) Do not take more than 300mg at a time Can take weeks or months to start working Can cause an ____ on initial treatment |
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Definition
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_____ is used to suppress the inflammation causing pain in an acute gout attack MOI is unknown, but they think it reduces the deposition of uric acid crystals causing a reduction in inflammation |
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Definition
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Prescipriton: Colchicine 0.6mg one PO q 1hr Most patients require up to 4 to 8 mg and patients on intermittent chronic use generally know their needed dose to control the pain Usually the pain abates in 24 to 48 hours Stop if ____ occurs, which sometimes occurs after the first dose; however, often a narcotic pain medicine is needed and that can stop the ____ |
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Definition
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When I see gout patients in my clinic I will usually aspirate, if needed, and run necessary labs I will put the patient on a pain medicine and ____. |
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Definition
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Term
Indocin 50mg one orally tid x 3-5 days
Hulsely will put her patients on this for? |
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Definition
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Term
If I suspect gout I send the patient back to their PCP or the rheumatologist, depending on insurance |
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Definition
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___________: Can occur after a systemic infection, STD, or an open wound It is usually viral, bacterial, or fungal Infective agent travels through the bloodstream or has direct contact to a joint and can cause immediate joint destruction Patient will develop joint pain, swelling, erythema at the joint, and fever within hours or a couple of days Pain with passive and active ROM Infants and children with bacterial infection, most common is staph and gram neg bacilli Adults include gonococci, staph, and strep Occasionally in adults spirochetes (Lyme dz and syphilis) All ages can experience a viral infection or even a fungal infection |
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Definition
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Infectious Arthritis Requires______ or Requires _____ to clean out the joint (ie. Arthroscopy or arthrotomy) I run labs on the aspirate as mentioned before under gout A WBC in the fluid >20,000 (usually >100,000) and PMNs >95% CBC with diff, CRP, ESR |
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Definition
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infectious arthritis: X-rays in 10-14 days of infection may show ____ Give the patient Abx that is the most likely organism – good history and PE important |
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Definition
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_______: A long-term disease that causes inflammation of the joints between the spinal bones, and the joints between the spine and pelvis The joints fuse over time |
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Definition
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Term
ANKYLOSING SPONDYLITIS Occurs in more ___ than ___ Most common between ages ___ and ___ |
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Definition
males than females 20 and 40 |
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Term
ANKYLOSING SPONDYLITISPain generally begins in the ___ joints and then spread to the ___ Pain is better with ___ |
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Definition
SI back
activity; worse with inactivity |
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Term
ANKYLOSING SPONDYLITIS: The patient may struggle with ____ when the ribs are involved Patient may complain of fatigue Patient may complain of other joint problems Uveitis, weight loss, and slight fever |
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Definition
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ANKYLOSING SPONDYLITIS Tests: CBC, ESR, HLA-B27 antigen X-rays of the spine and pelvis |
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Definition
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Term
ANKYLOSKING SPONDYLITIS Treatment? |
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Definition
is with NSAIDs, corticosteroids, TNF, cytotoxic drugs Physical therapy Sleeping on the back to maintain posture Surgery |
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Term
Schober test is used to help in diagnosis of _________. |
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Definition
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_____ is used to measure the ability of a patient to flex his/her lower back Mark 5cm below and 10cm above ___ with the patient in neutral Have the patient flex forward to touch toes, and if there is a less than ___cm increase between the marks then the patient has loss of flexion ability of the lower spine |
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Definition
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____ is ALWAYS the first line drug treatment for all the issues in this ppt! |
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Definition
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