| Literature DB >> 23227356 |
Abstract
Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, hypermobility type, constituting a phenotypic continuum with or, perhaps, corresponding to the joint hypermobility syndrome (JHS/EDS-HT), is likely the most common, though the least recognized, heritable connective tissue disorder. Known for decades as a hereditary condition with predominant rheumatologic manifestations, it is now emerging as a multisystemic disorder with widespread manifestations. Nevertheless, the practitioners' awareness of this condition is generally poor and most patients await years or, perhaps, decades before reaching the correct diagnosis. Among the various sites of disease manifestations, skin and mucosae represent a neglected organ where the dermatologist can easily spot diagnostic clues, which consistently integrate joint hypermobility and other orthopedic/neurologic manifestations at physical examination. In this paper, actual knowledge on JHS/EDS-HT is summarized in various sections. Particular attention has been posed on overlooked manifestations, including cutaneous, mucosal, and oropharyngeal features, and early diagnosis techniques, as a major point of interest for the practicing dermatologist. Actual research progresses on JH/EDS-HT envisage an unexpected link between heritable dysfunctions of the connective tissue and a wide range of functional somatic syndromes, most of them commonly diagnosed in the office of various specialists, comprising dermatologists.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23227356 PMCID: PMC3512326 DOI: 10.5402/2012/751768
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ISRN Dermatol ISSN: 2090-4592
Figure 1Typical cutaneous features of Ehlers-Danlos syndrome(s). Papyraceous (a), hemosiderotic and atrophic (b), and depressed (c) scars. Skin hyperextensibility (d). Molluscoid pseudotumor of the heel (e). Multiple ecchymoses with hemosiderotic depositions (f). Note that, except for skin hyperextensibility, such cutaneous changes are not observed in the hypermobility type.
Classification of EDSs.
| Subtype | Inheritance | Gene(s) |
|---|---|---|
| Major forms | ||
| Classic | AD |
|
| Hypermobility/JHS | AD? | Mostly unknown |
| Vascular | AD |
|
| Kyphoscoliotic | AR |
|
| Arthrochalasia | AD |
|
| Dermatosparaxis | AR |
|
| Rare/emerging forms | ||
| Tenascin X deficient | AR, AD? |
|
| Classic with vascular rupture | AD |
|
| Cardiac-valvular | AR |
|
| EDS/OI overlap | AD |
|
| With periventricular heterotopia | XLD |
|
| Musculocontractural | AR |
|
| Spondylocheirodysplastic | AR |
|
| Progeroid | AR |
|
| Kyphoscoliotic with deafness | AR |
|
| Parodontitis | AD | Unknown |
| Fibronectin deficient | AR | Unknown |
AD: autosomal dominant, AR: autosomal recessive, EDS/OI: Ehlers-Danlos syndrome/osteogenesis imperfect, JHS: joint hypermobility syndrome, XLD: X-linked dominant.
The Villefranche criteria for major EDS subtypes.
| Subtype | Major criteria | Minor criteria |
|---|---|---|
| Classic | Skin hyperextensibility | Smooth, velvety skin |
|
| ||
| Hypermobility | Hyperextensible and/or smooth, velvety skin | Recurring joint dislocations |
|
| ||
| Vascular | Thin, translucent skin | Acrogeria |
|
| ||
| Kyphoscoliotic | Generalized joint hypermobility | Tissue fragility, including atrophic scars |
|
| ||
| Arthrochalasis | Generalized joint hypermobility with recurrent subluxations | Skin hyperextensibility |
|
| ||
| Dermatosparaxis | Severe skin fragility | Soft, doughy skin texture |
Adapted from [4].
Note 1: no clear indication for using these criteria in the establishment of a firm clinical suspect of a specific Ehlers-Danlos syndrome subtype is specified. However, the presence of at least 1 major and 1 minor criteria is usually necessary for proceeding in molecular confirmation of Ehlers-Danlos syndrome subtypes with a known, prevalent molecular cause. The presence of at least two major criteria is strongly indicative for a definite diagnosis of the specific EDS subtype.
The Brighton criteria for JHS.
| The Brighton criteria | |
|---|---|
| Major criteria | |
| Beighton score ≥ 4/9 | |
| Arthralgia for >3 months in >4 joints | |
| Minor criteria | |
| Beighton score of 1–3 | |
| Arthralgia in 1–3 joints | |
| History of joint dislocations | |
| Soft-tissue lesions > 3 | |
| Marfan-like habitus | |
| Skin striae, hyperextensibility, or scarring | |
| Eye signs, lid laxity | |
| History of varicose veins, hernia, visceral prolapse |
Adapted from [9].
Note 1: criteria major 1 and minor 1 are mutually exclusive as are major 2 and minor 2.
Note 2: for the diagnosis of the joint hypermobility syndrome: both major, or 1 major and 2 minor, or 4 minor criteria, or 2 minor criteria and one or more first-degree affected relative(s).
Note 3: diagnosis of joint hypermobility syndrome needs previous (clinical/molecular) exclusion of other overlapping heritable connective tissue disorders, such as Marfan syndrome and other Ehlers-Danlos syndrome subtypes.
Extra-articular disorders associated with (generalized) JHM.
| Condition | Reference(s) |
|---|---|
| Anxiety | [ |
| Carpal tunnel syndrome | [ |
| Chiari malformation type I | [ |
| Chronic constipation | [ |
| Chronic fatigue syndrome | [ |
| Chronic regional pain syndrome | [ |
| Crohn's disease | [ |
| Developmental coordination disorder | [ |
| Faecal incontinence | [ |
| Fibromyalgia | [ |
| Fixed dystonia | [ |
| Functional gastrointestinal disorder | [ |
| Headache attributed to spontaneous cerebrospinal fluid leakage | [ |
| Hiatus hernia | [ |
| Mitral valve prolapse | [ |
| New daily persistent headache | [ |
| Pelvic organ prolapse | [ |
| Postural tachycardia syndrome | [ |
| Psychological distress | [ |
| Rectal evacuatory dysfunction | [ |
| Somatosensory amplification | [ |
| Urinary stress incontinence | [ |
Morphologic and orthopedic features of JHS/ED-HT.
| Feature | |
|---|---|
| Leptosomic built or true Marfanoid habitus | |
| Dorsal hyperkyphosis | |
| Lumbar hyperlordosis | |
| Scoliosis of mild degree | |
| Fixed subluxation of the costochondral | |
| Fixed dorsal subluxation of the distal radioulnar joint | |
| Fixed subluxation of the first carpometacarpal joint | |
| Cubitus valgus | |
| Femur anteversion1 | |
| Patella alta or baja | |
| Genuum valgum | |
| Flexible flatfoot | |
| Hallux valgus | |
| High-arched/narrow palate | |
| Facial asymmetry of mild degree (likely secondary to deformational plagiocephaly) |
1Intoeing, kissing rotulae, and “W” position of the lower limbs at sitting.
Forms of pain in EDSs also comprising JHS/EDS-HT.
| Pain subtype | Manifestations | Key reference(s) |
|---|---|---|
| Soft-tissue injuries | [ | |
| Dislocations | [ | |
| Nociceptive pain | Arthralgias | [ |
| Back pain | [ | |
| Myalgias/myofascial pain | [ | |
|
| ||
| Neuropathic pain | Compression neuropathy | [ |
| Peripheral neuropathy | [ | |
|
| ||
| Complex regional pain syndrome types I and II | [ | |
| Fibromyalgia | [ | |
| Dysfunctional pain | (Some) headache disorders | [ |
| Functional abdominal pain | [ | |
| Dysmenorrhea | [ | |
| Vulvodynia/dyspareunia | [ | |
Figure 4Visceroptosis of the gut in a 40-year-old woman with severely debilitating gastrointestinal functional complaints. Note marked gastroptosis (a) and pelvic localization of the small bowel (b) and transverse colon (c).
Figure 5Illustrative examples of universal goniometer and flexible tape as essential tools for assessing joint mobility.
The Beighton score for assessing generalized JHM.
| Sign | Yes | No |
|---|---|---|
| Passive apposition of the right thumb to the flexor aspect of the forearm | 1 | 0 |
| Passive apposition of the left thumb to the flexor aspect of the forearm | 1 | 0 |
| Passive dorsiflexion of the right V finger beyond 90 degrees | 1 | 0 |
| Passive dorsiflexion of the left V finger beyond 90 degrees | 1 | 0 |
| Hyperextension of the right elbow beyond 190 degrees | 1 | 0 |
| Hyperextension of the left elbow beyond 190 degrees | 1 | 0 |
| Hyperextension of the right knee beyond 190 degrees | 1 | 0 |
| Hyperextension of the left knee beyond 190 degrees | 1 | 0 |
| Forward flexion of the trunk with the knees extended and the palms resting flat on the floor | 1 | 0 |
Adapted from [10].
Note: the Beighton score ranges from 0 to 9. Generalized joint hypermobility is fixed for a total score of 5/9 or above for the Villefranche criteria and 4/9 or above for the Brighton criteria. Unstandardized modifications for specific population subgroups, such as children (increasing by 1 point these limits) and males (reducing by 1 point these limits), are reasonable. For noncollaborative subjects, a modified Beighton score lacking the spinal bending maneuver and a maximum score of 8 may be applied.
Standards for evaluating range of motion of adults' joints.
| Movement | Maximal ROM |
|---|---|
| Shoulder elevation through flexion | 180° |
| Elbow extension | 190°–195°1 |
| Elbow pronation-supination | 170°2 |
| Wrist flexion | 80° |
| Wrist extension | 70° |
| Wrist ulnar deviation | 30° |
| Wrist radial deviation | 20° |
| 2nd finger MCP joint extension | 45° |
| PIP and DIP joint extension | 0° |
| Hip abduction with leg extended | 45° |
| Hip adduction with leg extended | 30° |
| Knee extension | 180°–190°1 |
| Ankle dorsiflexion | 20° |
| Ankle plantar flexion | 50° |
| 1st toe MTP joint extension | 70° |
| Mandible depression | 35–50 mm |
| Mandible protrusion | 3–7 mm |
| Mandible lateral deviation | 10–15 mm |
| Neck rotation | 11 cm3 |
| Neck flexion | 45° |
| Neck extension | 45° |
| Neck lateral flexion | 45° |
| Thoracolumbar spine lateral flexion | 35° |
1The lower and the upper end fits better for men and women, respectively.
280° in supination and 90° in pronation from mid-position.
3From the tip of the chin to the lateral aspect of the acromion process.
DIP: distal interphalangeal, MCP: metacarpophalangeal, MTP: metatarsophalangeal, PIP: proximal interphalangeal, ROM: range of motion.
A proposed questionnaire for investigating JHM by history.
| (1) | Can you now (or could you ever) place your hands flat on the floor without bending your knees? |
| (2) | Can you now (or could you ever) bend your thumb to touch your forearm? |
| (3) | As a child did you amuse your friends by contorting your body into strange shapes or could you do the splits? |
| (4) | As a child or teenager did your shoulder or kneecap dislocate on more than one occasion? |
| (5) | Do you consider yourself double jointed? |
Adapted from [117].
Lifestyle recommendations for JHS/EDS-HT.
| Recommendation | |
|---|---|
| Promote regular, aerobic fitness | |
| Promote fitness support with strengthening, gentle stretching, and proprioception exercises | |
| Promote postural and ergonomic hygiene especially during sleep, at school, and at workplace | |
| Promote weight control (BMI < 25) | |
| Promote daily relaxation activities | |
| Promote lubrication during sexual intercourse (women) | |
| Promote early treatment of malocclusion | |
| Avoid high impact sports/activities | |
| Avoid low environmental temperatures | |
| Avoid prolonged sitting positions and prolonged recumbency | |
| Avoid sudden head-up postural change | |
| Avoid excessive weight lifting/carrying | |
| Avoid large meals (especially of refined carbohydrates) | |
| Avoid hard foods intake and excessive jaw movements (ice, gums, etc.) | |
| Avoid bladder irritant foods (e.g., coffee and citrus products) | |
| Avoid nicotine and alcohol intake |
Adapted from [118].
Note: these recommendations must be intended as flexible indications for ameliorating quality of life and do not represent lifesaving solutions.
Figure 6Schematic representation of extra-articular manifestations of Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, hypermobility type (alternatively termed joint hypermobility syndrome). The dark grey circle symbolizes the phenotypic spectrum of this condition, which includes a series of functional somatic syndromes and tissue/organ-specific dysfunctions (i.e., the white triangles, whose tips are indeed comprised within the dark circle). Outside the clinical spectrum of Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, hypermobility type, the single phenotypic components may be observed in isolation or, perhaps, in incomplete associations within the general population (the larger and light grey circle). It is expected that, in the future, the study of heritable dysfunctions of the connective tissue will move from the dark gray circle to the light gray one, as a prominent field of interest. 1Mostly including fibromyalgia, myofascial pain and complex regional pain syndromes. 2Comprising xerophthalmia, xerostomia, vaginal dryness, and abnormal sweating. 3Asthma, atopy, gluten sensitivity, inflammatory bowel disease, and recurrent cystitis are all possible manifestations of an underlying immune system dysregulation.