Musculoskeletal ImagingPsoriatic arthritis
a
seronegative spondyloarthropathy occurring in some patients with psoriasis. Five broad clinical varieties of psoriatic arthritis have been recognized:
polyarthritis characterized by distal interphalangeal joint involvement;
a deforming type of arthritis characterized by widespread ankylosis and occasionally
arthritis mutilans;
a symmetric seronegative polyarthritis simulating
rheumatoid arthritis but without rheumatoid factor;
monoarthritis or asymmetric oligoarthritis; and
sacroiliitis and spondylitis resembling
ankylosing spondylitis.
The articular disease may be monoarticular, pauciarticular or polyarticular in its distribution, and virtually any joint can be affected. In some patients, low back complaints predominate because of involvement of the spine and the sacroiliac joints. Prominent soft tissue swelling about involved joints, which may affect an entire digit (sausage digit), sometimes occurs. The histocompatibility antigen HLA-B27 is frequently present in patients with psoriasis and sacroiliitis. Classic radiographic features of psoriatic arthritis are listed in Table 1 (Fig.1) (Fig.2).
Psoriatic arthritis, Table 1. Characteristics of psoriatic arthritis.
| Involvement of synovial and cartilaginous joints and entheses |
| Asymmetric distribution more common than symmetric distribution |
| Involvement of interphalangeal joints of the hands and feet |
| Sacroiliitis and spondylitis with paravertebral ossification |
| Bone erosion witih adjacent proliferation |
| Intraarticular bone ankylosis |
| Destruction of phalangeal tufts |
Among the abnormalities seen in psoriatic arthritis are soft tissue swelling, joint space narrowing or widening, prominent bone erosion, striking bone proliferation, and periostitis in the metaphyses and diaphyses (leading to ivory phalanx, intraarticular bone fusion in large joints, resorption of the tufts of the distal phalanges and malalignment and subluxation of joints (opera glass hand).
DR/RB
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PA radiograph of the fingers show advanced changes with psoriatic arthritis including intraarticular ankylosis, marginal and central erosions (arrows) and flexion contractures at the distal interphalangeal joints. The proximal interphalangeal joints are far better preserved.
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Psoriatic arthritis, Fig.1 | | Psoriatic arthritis, Fig.2 | |