Literature DB >> 3412175

Polyarticular versus monoarticular gout: a prospective, comparative analysis of clinical features.

G V Lawry1, P T Fan, R Bluestone.   

Abstract

This investigation was undertaken to define prospectively the clinical characteristics of patients with crystal-documented gouty arthritis simultaneously involving multiple joints. Of 106 consecutive patients with gouty arthritis (GA), 42 (40%) had articular inflammation at 2 or more sites. Comparison of these 42 patients with GA with the 64 patients with GA who presented with monoarthritis yielded the following conclusions: 1) Polyarticular gout represents one end of a generally predictable spectrum of GA, reflecting chronicity associated with poor patients understanding, poor patient compliance, and suboptimal physician management. 2) Polyarticular patients with GA tend to develop attacks of more smoldering onset and increasing duration, while joint involvement tends to occur in an ascending but asymmetrical fashion, with upper extremity joints later added to repeatedly active lower extremity sites. 3) There may be a significant discrepancy between the site (or sites) of the GA patient's chief complaint and clinically involved joints on careful physical examination. 4) Recognition of polyarticular joint involvement increases the number of sites for potential joint and/or tophus aspiration, permitting greater ease of establishing a definitive diagnosis. 5) No single laboratory or synovial fluid value meaningfully distinguishes patients with polyarticular from those with monoarticular gout.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1988        PMID: 3412175     DOI: 10.1097/00005792-198809000-00004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)        ISSN: 0025-7974            Impact factor:   1.889


  8 in total

1.  A clinical picture of chronic polyarticular tophaceous gout.

Authors:  Andrea Emilio Salvi; Giovanni Pietro Metelli; Elio Domeneghini; Antonio Cantalamessa
Journal:  Rheumatol Int       Date:  2009-12-13       Impact factor: 2.631

2.  Gout in black South Africans: a clinical and genetic study.

Authors:  B Cassim; G M Mody; V K Deenadayalu; M G Hammond
Journal:  Ann Rheum Dis       Date:  1994-11       Impact factor: 19.103

3.  Ulcerated tophaceous gout.

Authors:  Girish K Patel; Wendy L Davies; Patricia P Price; Keith G Harding
Journal:  Int Wound J       Date:  2010-10       Impact factor: 3.315

4.  Gout, have we met before? No, not like this...

Authors:  Sultan Mirzoyev; Nandan Anavekar
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  2006-12       Impact factor: 5.128

Review 5.  The Role of miRNAs in Common Inflammatory Arthropathies: Osteoarthritis and Gouty Arthritis.

Authors:  Panagiota Papanagnou; Theodora Stivarou; Maria Tsironi
Journal:  Biomolecules       Date:  2016-11-11

6.  Adverse reaction to metal debris with concomitant incidental crystalline arthropathy in hip arthroplasty.

Authors:  Edward J Testa; Brian J McGrory
Journal:  Arthroplast Today       Date:  2016-12-01

7.  Refractory gout attack.

Authors:  Simone Fargetti; Claudia Goldenstein-Schainberg; Andressa Silva Abreu; Ricardo Fuller
Journal:  Case Rep Med       Date:  2012-11-25

Review 8.  Uricase and other novel agents for the management of patients with treatment-failure gout.

Authors:  John S Sundy; Michael S Hershfield
Journal:  Curr Rheumatol Rep       Date:  2007-06       Impact factor: 4.686

  8 in total

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