1. An ultrasonographic insight into musculoskeletal manifestation in 100 systemic lupus erythematosus patients.
- Author
-
Popov IH, Pamfil C, Tămaș MM, Onea TN, Felea I, Hălbac A, Rednic N, and Rednic S
- Subjects
- Humans, Methotrexate, Arthritis diagnostic imaging, Arthritis epidemiology, Arthritis etiology, Joint Diseases, Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic complications, Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic diagnostic imaging, Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic epidemiology, Synovitis diagnostic imaging, Synovitis epidemiology, Synovitis etiology, Tenosynovitis diagnostic imaging, Tenosynovitis epidemiology, Tenosynovitis etiology
- Abstract
Objectives: We aimed to investigate the prevalence of US findings in the hand joints and related tendons and explore clinical and laboratory associations in SLE patients of the typical lupus clinic., Methods: One hundred consecutive SLE patients were enrolled in the study. Using B-mode and Doppler US, bilateral wrist, metacarpophalangeal and proximal interphalangeal joints were examined for synovitis and erosions, as well as for signs of hand tenosynovitis., Results: US detected synovitis (grade 1-3) in 75% and erosive changes in 25% of the cohort. We found that clinical examination underestimated grade ≥2 synovitis by 13%, while US detected SH grade ≥2 in 10% of asymptomatic patients. The overall inflammatory burden, reflected by the US score, was associated with disease activity (respectively with CPR, SELENA-2K, MS-BILAG, and hypocomplementemia), as well as the presence of bone erosions. Rhupus patients had higher inflammatory markers, significantly more synovial hypertrophy, more erosions, more grade 3 tenosynovitis, and were more likely to receive methotrexate (p<0.001) than patients with SLE arthritis, while patients with Jaccoud's arthropathy were more likely to accumulate damage. The dominant hand exhibited more inflammatory changes (respectively synovial hypertrophy grade ≥2) at both the wrist and MCP joints; however, handedness was not associated with structural damage., Conclusions: In conclusion: 1. joint involvement in SLE is frequent and underacknowledged; 2. the overall inflammatory burden is associated with systemic disease activity and joint damage; (3) destructive arthritis is more likely to occur in the context of concomitant RA or within an "RA-like" subtype of SLE arthropathy; 4. hand dominance is associated with synovitis, but not structural changes; 5. US assessment may help tailor the management of joint involvement, thus preventing joint damage and disability in SLE patients.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF