The 15-Minute Visit
A guide to patient encounters in the real world of office practice
Chronic gouty arthritis
PROBLEM
A 61-year-old man presents with a nodule on his elbow that he has had for
several years but that has become more bothersome over the past year as it has
slowly increased in size. He reports episodic attacks of joint pain.
APPROACH
The physical examination revealed a swollen olecranon bursa containing a rounded,
subcutaneous nodule that was slightly tender and rubbery to the touch. Also
noteworthy was a subcutaneous nodule at the left second metacarpal-phalangeal
joint (MCP), as well as synovial proliferation or swelling of the left wrist
and the bilateral second and third MCP joints.
The differential diagnosis for this patient includes gout, pseudogout, and
rheumatoid arthritis. Other forms of inflammatory arthritis, including psoriatic,
hepatitis-C-associated, and spondyloarthropathy, could cause similar joint findings
but would not be expected to cause nodules. In the elderly, gout may often be
misdiagnosed as rheumatoid arthritis, since the acute attacks may have been
occurred years before, and the patient may now be experiencing a chronic arthritis
associated with subcutaneous tophaceous deposits on the fingers, toes, and elbows.
Conversely, since hyperuricemia occurs more often than clinical gout, a flare
pain from osteoarthritis of the metarsophalangeal (MTP) joint of the big toe
in a patient with hyperuricemia can lead the unwary practitioner into applying
the wrong diagnostic label of gouty arthritis.
Calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate crystal deposition disease (CPPD) may also
resemble gout and occurs concomitantly in up to 40% of patients with gout. Typically,
CPPD may involve a different anatomic distribution from gout in early disease,
with greater frequency of wrist involvement and much less podagra. CPPD is associated
with joint-space narrowing. Additionally, the absence of erosions and tophi
further distinguishes CPPD from gout. Since gout and calcinosis can coexist,
chondrocalcinosis on radiography does not exclude gout. The diagnosis of gout
is confirmed by finding monosodium urate or pseudogout crystals in the aspirated
fluid of a joint or subcutaneous tophus of gout).
With radiograph findings of punched-out lesions in the MTP joint with overhanging
edges, a diagnosis of chronic gouty arthritis was suspected in this patient
and later confirmed with joint aspiration. As the most common inflammatory arthritis,
gout is more prevalent in men than in premenopausal women, and its peak incidence
is seen in patients 30 to 50 years old. The main predisposing factors for gout
in men are a family history, genetic predisposition, obesity, alcohol (beer
and liquor) intake (particularly in a binge pattern), and a high purine diet.
Tophi may form almost anywhere. Older patients, particularly women taking
diuretics, may to have gout in the small distal joints of the fingers. Tophi
and inflammation may also gradually erode cartilage and bone, ultimately destroying
the joint.
Potential causes
Is the prevalence of gout increasing because of the popularity of high-protein
diets? A recently published 12-year study found that men in whom gout developed
were more likely to be in the highest quintile of meat intake. In addition,
the increased intake of a greater variety of dietary products was associated
with a decreased incidence of gout. Increased urate levels have been epidemiologically
linked to obesity, high cholesterol levels, insulin resistance, and hypertension.
In addition, several studies have suggested an association between coronary
heart disease (CHD) and gout. One study concluded that gout was an independent
risk factor for CHD.
Clinical course
In some patients, flares of gout can be triggered by events surrounding hospitalization,
joint injury, surgery, certain drug treatments, and overindulgence in alcohol
or purine-rich foods. According to some studies, symptoms occur more frequently
in the spring (with the peak in April). Most often, symptoms are initially monoarticular.
Gout can be conceptualized as having 4 clinical stages: asymptomatic, acute,
intercritical, and chronic.
Asymptomatic hyperuricemia, the first stage of gout, occurs
when urate deposition is initiated as a result of elevated uric acid levels.
This stage lasts many years (seemingly shorter in transplant patients taking
cyclosporine). Although chronic hyperuricemia virtually always precedes gout,
it does not inevitably lead to it. In fact, the full-blown arthritic disease
develops in less than a quarter of the hyperuricemic population.
Acute gouty arthritis occurs when the symptoms of gout appear.
Sometimes gout is heralded by brief twinges of pain in affected joints, which
can precede the full-blown condition by several years. In many cases, the attack
occurs late at night or early in the morning and wakes the patient from sleep.
Localized swelling may extend beyond the joint, an indication of the intense
inflammatory response. The skin over the affected area is often red, shiny,
and tense and may start to peel after a few days.
Intercritical gout refers to the asymptomatic periods between
attacks. Crystals may still be found in asymptomatic joints at this time. The
first attack is usually followed by a complete remission of symptoms but, if
left untreated, gout nearly always recurs at some point. One study found that
62% of untreated subjects experienced at least 1 further attack within 1 year.
At the end of 2 years, 78% of patients experienced a recurrence. After 10 years,
93% of the patients had had repeat attacks.
Chronic tophaceous gout occurs when gout is unsuccessfully treated
and the intercritical periods become shorter. Though sometimes less intense,
the attacks may last longer. Over many years, gout may become a disorder characterized
by constant low-grade joint pain, stiffness, and inflammation. Gout may eventually
affect additional joints, including, in rare cases, the shoulders, hips, or
spine.
TREATMENT
In recent years, some of the standard treatment recommendations for acute
and chronic gout have undergone revision. For example, IV colchicine use is
rarely advocated for treatment of routine acute gout. Likewise, hourly administration
of oral colchicine is rarely used. NSAIDs are the first-line therapy for acute
gout and should be given in full dosages unless there is a history of peptic
ulcer disease, a background of renal impairment, significant hypertension, or
cardiac failure. The NSAIDs used in the treatment of acute gout include ibuprofen,
indomethacin (Indocin, Indochron E-R), ketoprofen (Orudis, Oruvail), naproxen,
and sulindac (Clinoril). Intra-articular corticosteroids (if infection is excluded)
and systemic corticosteroids are useful in older patients and in those with
impaired renal function.
This patient was prescribed indomethacin, 50 mg tid. When his pain and inflammation
significantly decreased by day 2, the dosage was decreased to 25 mg tid until
his symptoms fully resolved on day 7. One month after his acute attack, the
patient was put on long-term prophylaxis with allopurinol (Zyloprim). Allopurinol
is the chronic therapy of choice for patients with tophi. The patient was started
at a low dosage of 50 mg/d of allopurinol, which was increased over 3 to 4 weeks,
titrated to the dosage that lowered the serum uric acid level to less than 6
mg/dL. (Note that an allopurinol dosage of 300 mg/d may accomplish this in only
about 50% of patients.) The hypouremic drugs used for gout can also precipitate
acute gout symptoms and thus should not be used until symptoms have clearly
subsided.
What would you do if . . . 1. The patient never responds completely after adequate
initial treatment with indomethacin?
2. The patient's medical history contraindicates NSAIDs
and colchicine?
Answers 1. The NSAID dosage may have been insufficient because the
duration of treatment was too short. If the dosage of indomethacin cannot
be increased, prescribe a corticosteroid in moderately high dosages until
the attack subsides.
2. Start the patient on a high dosage of an oral corticosteroid.
When the attack resolves completely, taper the dosage slowly over 7 to
10 days if the attack was severe.
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For more on this topic . . . Choi HK, Atkinson K, Karlson EW, et al. Purine-rich foods, dairy and
protein intake, and the risk of gout. N Eng J Med. 2004;350:1093-1103.
Mandell BF. The clinical picture: the crystal, the gout, and the paradox.
Cleve Clin J Med. 2002;69:720.
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ADVISOR
KARL SINGER, MD, general internist and family physician in private
practice in Exeter, NH; and the Medical Director of Patient Care.
REVIEWER
BRIAN F. MANDELL, MD, PhD, Education Program Director, Rheumatic and
Immunologic Diseases, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, Ohio.
The 15-Minute Visit. Patient Care May 2004;38:10-11.