| Literature DB >> 27446605 |
Mateusz Płaza1, Anna Nowakowska-Płaza2, Marta Walentowska-Janowicz1, Marek Chojnowski3, Iwona Sudoł-Szopińska4.
Abstract
This article presents a patient with a long history of type 1 diabetes mellitus complicated with neuropathy and Charcot disease. The most common cause of neuropathic osteoarthropathy, called Charcot osteoarthropathy, is poorly controlled diabetes. The clinical picture is characterized by considerable edema, redness and increased skin temperature with relatively slight pain due to injury to nerve fibers responsible for pain sensation. The differential diagnosis should include bacterial or autoimmune arthritis, arthritis associated with gout as well as venous thrombosis and injury. The contribution of a local inflammatory reaction and abnormal bone turnover with excessive osteoclast activity might play a role in the etiopathogenesis of this disease. As a result, osseous and articular destruction progresses rapidly leading to irreversible deformity of the foot. Avoiding weight-bearing and resting the foot in a specially selected plaster cast is the most important part of treatment. Patients with the aforementioned complaints are referred to radiologists for imaging examinations. An ultrasonographer should pay attention to changes typical of Charcot arthropathy, such as: inflammatory and destructive changes in joints of the foot, uneven contour of bones with thickening and periosteal hyperemia as well as soft tissue swelling.Entities:
Keywords: Charcot arthropathy; diabetes mellitus; neurogenic osteoarthropathy; polyneuropathy; ultrasound imaging
Year: 2016 PMID: 27446605 PMCID: PMC4954866 DOI: 10.15557/JoU.2016.0022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ultrason ISSN: 2084-8404
Fig. 1Clinical picture of the left foot with Charcot arthropathy
Fig. 2US imaging of the left feet: inflammatory and destructive changes in the 2nd metatarsophalangeal joint with erosions, synovial thickening with signs of hypervascularization (A,B), uneven periosteum of the 2nd metatarsal with intense blood flow (C)
Fig. 3X-ray of the feet. . AP; . oblique X-ray of the left foot: destructive osteolytic changes within the bones composing the 2nd–4th metatarsophalangeal articulations with detached bony fragments, geodes in the head of the 5th metatarsal, osteoclast remodeling of the proximal phalanx of the 2nd digit and 1st–3rd metatarsal shafts as well as 5th metatarsal (to a lower extent) as well as periosteal buildup in the 2nd–5th metatarsal shafts and proximal phalanxes of the 2nd and 3rd digits. Typical image of diabetic osteoarthropathy
Fig. 4. Scintigraphy of the feet with the use of 99mTc-sulesomab-labelled leukocytes: a focus of intense tracer accumulation within the navicular bone. . AP scintigraphy of the feet shows a hot spot corresponding to sclerosis and fracture – an initial stage of Charcot neuroarthropathy, probably triggered by infection