| Literature DB >> 34145558 |
Alice B Gottlieb1, Catherine Bakewell2, Joseph F Merola3.
Abstract
Psoriatic arthritis is an inflammatory condition affecting up to 30% of patients with psoriasis. Patients may experience irreversible joint damage if not treated early, and diagnostic delays of even 6 months are associated with radiographic progression and impaired function. Therefore, early detection and intervention are of critical importance in patients with psoriatic arthritis. Given that psoriasis often precedes symptoms of psoriatic arthritis, dermatologists are uniquely positioned to identify patients with psoriatic arthritis early in their disease course, before permanent damage has occurred. Several screening tools have been developed to help dermatologists identify patients who may have psoriatic arthritis, but these tools may not capture patients with subclinical disease or quantify the type and severity of the underlying tissue insult, which is often the presenting sign of psoriatic arthritis. In these cases, a combination of clinical assessment and musculoskeletal imaging (e.g., ultrasound) is required. This review summarizes three common musculoskeletal imaging techniques used in the diagnosis and management of patients with psoriatic arthritis: conventional radiography, ultrasound, and magnetic resonance imaging. Further understanding of musculoskeletal imaging will assist dermatologists in making treatment decisions and allow them to have a more active role in the detection of psoriatic arthritis.Entities:
Keywords: MRI; Psoriasis; Psoriatic arthritis; Radiography; Ultrasound
Year: 2021 PMID: 34145558 PMCID: PMC8322349 DOI: 10.1007/s13555-021-00565-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dermatol Ther (Heidelb)
Imaging techniques currently used in the diagnosis and analysis of progression of PsA
| Imaging technique | Strengths | Weaknesses | Preferred use |
|---|---|---|---|
| X-ray [ | Inexpensive and readily available | Unable to detect early signs of subclinical PsA in soft tissues | Assessment of clinical PsA |
| Can identify joint damage/new bone formation associated with more advanced disease (e.g., erosions and enthesophytes) | Ionizing radiation (doses to hands are lowest risk) | Detection of joint damage (erosion, fluffy periostitis, new bone formation, enthesophytes) and monitoring of radiographic progression | |
| Ultrasound | Inexpensive, portable, and readily available [ | Unable to detect intraosseous abnormalities due to active enthesitis, such as bone marrow edema [ | Assessment of preclinical PsA |
| Nonionizing and noninvasive [ | Weak signals and artifacts due to small number of blood vessels in entheses and proximity to bone [ | Visualization of the peripheral joints and entheses for detection of enthesitis and assessment of synovial tissue, joint effusions, and erosions [ | |
| Capability of real-time dynamic imaging of multiple joints/enthuses [ | Lack of standardization among different machines [ | Identification of subclinical synovitis and tenosynovitis [ | |
| Operator must be familiar with imaging artifacts that can cause misinterpretation or be mistaken for pathology [ | Measurement of abnormal vascularization (indicator of active inflammation) [ | ||
| Differentiation of subclinical enthesitis [ | |||
| MRI | Nonionizing and noninvasive [ | Substantially higher cost and lower availability; long length of time to perform scan [ | Assessment of preclinical PsA [ |
| Muscles, ligaments, and tendons are seen much more clearly than on X-rays [ | Potential for toxicity (use of gadolinium-containing contrast agents) [ | Assessment of axial involvement and active inflammatory changes and soft tissue abnormalities (thickening of tendons and ligaments, joint effusions and inflammation, bone erosions, enthesophytes, and intraosseous bone marrow edema associated with enthesitis and sacroiliitis) [ | |
| Can monitor therapeutic response [ | Visualization of small, active inflammatory changes and lesions that are present early in the disease course [ |
Fig. 1X-ray imaging of structural changes in patients with PsA. Clockwise from top left: diffuse soft tissue swelling (sausage digit); destruction and widening of the joint space; bone production (periostitis); and marginal bone erosion. PsA psoriatic arthritis
Batlle JA, et al. Presented at the European Congress of Radiology 2011, poster C-0065 (copyright ©: 2001–2018 European Congress of Radiology, 2005–2018 European Society of Radiology)
Glossary of technical terms used in clinical imaging study reports
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Absorption | Reduction in sound wave intensity as it passes through tissue, with energy lost in the form of heat |
| Anechoic | Without an echo; images appear black |
| Anisotropy | Artifact is dependent on the angle of the ultrasound beam, which may result in an incorrect diagnosis; dramatic changes in reflection result from small changes in the angle of incidence of the transducer; notably observed in muscles and tendons |
| Ankylosis | Abnormal joint stiffening and immobility resulting from fusion of bones |
| Attenuation | Sound waves become weaker and lose energy during deeper travel within the body; composed of three processes: reflection, absorption, and refraction |
| Contrast | Difference in signal intensity divided by the average signal intensity of two adjacent regions |
| Contrast agent | Substance given to a patient to alter the image intensity of a particular body region |
| Dactylitis | Diffuse soft tissue thickening/inflammation in the fingers and toes, i.e., “sausage digit” (associated with synovitis, tenosynovitis, and enthesitis) |
| Echogenicity | Ability to return the signal back to the transducer (an echo) |
| Enthesis | Connective tissue between bone and either a tendon or ligament |
| Enthesitis | Inflammation of the entheses |
| Enthesopathy | Presence of either the combination of at least abnormal thickening and hypoechogenicity of the tendon insertion with or without the presence of a Doppler signal (grade 0–3) or ≥ 2 Doppler signals alone with or without abnormal thickening and hypoechogenicity |
| Enthesophyte | Abnormal bony projection at the attachment of a tendon or ligament |
| Erosion | Gradual destruction and loss of bone in a particular area |
| Gadolinium (Gd) | Paramagnetic contrast agent that strongly shortens T1; very bright on T1W images and especially useful for observing vascular structures; given in chelated form, as it is toxic by itself |
| Hyperechoic | More echogenic (increased density of echoes) than surrounding tissues and appears lighter |
| Hypoechoic | Less echogenic (fewer echoes) than surrounding tissues and appears darker |
| Isoechoic | Same echogenicity as surrounding tissue and indistinguishable in color |
| Joint space narrowing (JSN) | Narrowing of the joint space between the bones, resulting in a change in the joint’s range of motion |
| Juxta-articular osteopenia | Loss of bone mass near a joint |
| Luxation | Complete separation of the joints |
| Osteolysis | Progressive destruction of bony tissue through active resorption of bone matrix by osteoclasts (multinucleated bone cells) |
| Osteophyte | Abnormal bony projection along the edge of bone, often forming in joints |
| Osteoproliferation | Growth (proliferation) of bone tissue |
| Pencil-in-cup deformity | Periarticular (around the joint) erosions and bone resorption leading to a sharpened pencil shape |
| Periosteum | Tissue surrounding bone |
| Periostitis | Inflammation of the periosteum |
| Reflection | Sound wave passes between two tissues of different acoustic speeds, with a portion of the waves returning to the transducer |
| Refraction | Sound waves are deflected away from the straight path with an angle of deflection away from the transducer |
| Repetition time (TR) | Time between successive pulse sequences applied to the same slice |
| Sacroiliac joint | Joint that connects the hip bones to the sacrum (triangular bone between the lumbar spine and tailbone) |
| Sacroiliitis | Inflammation of the sacroiliac joints |
| Sclerosis | Unusual hardening or thickening of bone |
| Short-tau inversion recovery (STIR) | Used to suppress the signal from fat, or more specifically tissues with T1 values in the range of fat; cannot be used as a fat suppression technique following gadolinium administration |
| Subluxation | Connecting bone is partially out of the joint but can often return to normal position |
| T1 | Spin–lattice relaxation time; measure of the time taken for spinning protons to realign with the external magnetic field |
| T1-weighted (T1W) | Image where most of the contrast between tissues is due to differences in tissue T1; fatty tissues appear bright while fluid appears black; produced by using a short echo time (TE) and TR |
| T2 | Spin–spin relaxation time; measure of the time taken for spinning protons to lose phase coherence among nuclei spinning perpendicular to the main field |
| T2-weighted (T2W) | Image where most of the contrast between tissues is due to differences in tissue T2; both fatty and water-based tissues appear bright; fatty tissue is distinguishable from water-based tissue through comparison with T1W images; produced by using a longer TE and TR than T1W |
| Transmission | Sound waves continue traveling deeper into the body and are not reflected initially but can be reflected by deeper tissue structures |
Fig. 2Clinical, radiographic, and ultrasound assessments in a patient with PsA. Top left: nail changes, dactylitis, and DIP subluxation as seen during clinical examination. Top right: conventional radiographs of the same patient exhibiting “wispy periostitis” and DIP subluxation (indicated by the arrow). Bottom left: ultrasound providing a longitudinal view of the DIP extensor tendon (indicated by the triple asterisk) showing enthesitis in the hand (extensive cortical irregularity indicated by the downward arrow; DIP joint indicated by the upward arrow) as well as synovial effusion at the DIP joint (indicated by the double asterisk) and synovial hypertrophy (single asterisk). Bottom right: power Doppler ultrasound showing the same area of damage, with the Doppler signal indicating active inflammation around the cortical irregularity. DIP distal interphalangeal joint, PsA psoriatic arthritis.
Reprinted with permission from The Journal of Rheumatology, Bakewell et al. [13]. All rights reserved
Fig. 3Imaging of entheses by ultrasound. Top: entheseal structures. Bottom left and center: ultrasound (left) and ultrasound with Doppler images (center) of the right Achilles tendon of a patient with PsA experiencing no tenderness on clinical examination. Visualized changes include erosion/cortical irregularities (arrows) and distal enthesophyte (arrowhead). Bottom right: Achilles heel with Doppler signal within calcaneal erosion, indicating current activity and Achilles intrasubstance hypoechogenicity/thickening. Arrows indicate proximal erosions in the calcaneus. PsA psoriatic arthritis
Fig. 4Imaging of entheses by MRI. Top: soft tissues of the entheses visualized by MRI. Bottom left: enthesitis, synovitis, and capsulitis in sacroiliac joint. Bottom right: T1-weighted semicoronal MRIs through the sacroiliac joints after intravenous contrast injection. Enhancement is seen at the right sacroiliac joint (arrow), indicating active sacroiliitis. BME bone marrow edema, MRI magnetic resonance imaging, STIR short-tau inversion recovery
Reprinted by permission from McQueen F, et al. Arthritis Res Ther. 2006;8(2):207 (copyright © 2006, Springer Nature) and from Sung S, et al. Br J Radiol. 2017; 90(1078):20170090 (© 2017 British Institute of Radiology)
| The early detection and appropriate management of psoriatic arthritis (PsA) are critically important in improving patient outcomes. |
| In many patients who develop PsA, psoriasis precedes arthritis by 7–12 years, ideally positioning dermatologists to identify and treat patients who may have early signs of PsA. |
| However, PsA is often underdiagnosed in both primary care and dermatology practices; therefore, dermatologists should be encouraged to be proactive during patient visits and inquire about joint pain, consider the possibility of axial disease, and evaluate for tenderness at entheseal sites. |
| Understanding musculoskeletal imaging techniques that rheumatologists use will increase meaningful collaborations between dermatologists and rheumatologists and aid dermatologists in diagnosing PsA, including subclinical disease, and making timely treatment decisions. |