|
|

|
Health Information
|
Thursday, January 08, 2009
|
|
Find
more information about this topic from either the Web or the world's best
medical journals by using the search boxes at the top of this page.
|
| |
|
Arthritis and Rheumatic Disease
|
How
Are Rheumatic Diseases Diagnosed?
Diagnosing rheumatic
diseases can be difficult because some symptoms and signs are common
to many different diseases. A general practitioner or family doctor
may be able to evaluate a patient or refer him or her to a rheumatologist:
a doctor who specializes in treating arthritis and other rheumatic
diseases.
The doctor will
review the patient’s medical history, conduct a physical examination,
and obtain laboratory tests and X rays or other imaging tests. The
doctor may need to see the patient more than once to make an accurate
diagnosis.
|
|
Medical
History
It is vital
for people with joint pain to give the doctor a complete medical
history. Answers to the following questions will help the doctor
make an accurate diagnosis:
- Is the pain
in one or more joints?
- When does
the pain occur?
- How long
does the pain last?
- When did
you first notice the pain?
- What were
you doing when you first noticed the pain?
- Does activity
make the pain better or worse?
- Have you
had any illnesses or accidents that may account for the pain?
- Is there
a family history of any arthritis or rheumatic diseases?
- What medicine(s)
are you taking?
It may be helpful
for people to keep a daily journal that describes the pain. Patients
should write down what the affected joint looks like, how it feels,
how long the pain lasts, and what they were doing when the pain
started.
|
|
Physical
Examination and Laboratory Tests
The doctor will
examine all of the patient’s joints for redness, warmth, deformity,
ease of movement, and tenderness. Because some forms of arthritis,
such as lupus, may affect other organs, a complete physical examination
including the heart, lungs, abdomen, nervous system, and eyes, ears,
and throat may be necessary. The doctor may order some laboratory
tests to help confirm a diagnosis. Samples of blood, urine, or synovial
fluid (fluid found in the joint) may be needed for the tests.
|
|
Common
Laboratory Tests
- Antinuclear
antibody (ANA)—This test checks blood levels of antibodies
that are often present in people who have connective tissue diseases
or other autoimmune disorders, such as lupus. Since the antibodies
react with material in the cell’s nucleus (control center), they
are referred to as antinuclear antibodies. There are also tests
for individual types of ANA’s that may be more specific to people
with certain autoimmune disorders. ANA’s are also sometimes found
in healthy people. Therefore, having ANA’s in the blood does not
necessarily mean that a person has a disease.
- Arthrocentesis—Arthrocentesis
or joint aspiration is done to obtain a sample of synovial fluid.
The doctor injects a local anesthetic, inserts a thin, hollow
needle into the joint, and removes the synovial fluid into a syringe.
The test provides important diagnostic information. For example,
the test allows the doctor to see whether crystals (found in patients
with gout or other types of crystal-induced arthritis) or bacteria
or viruses (found in patients with infectious arthritis) are present
in the joint.
- Complement—This
test measures the level of complement, a group of proteins in
the blood. Complement helps destroy foreign substances, such as
germs, that enter the body. A low blood level of complement is
common in people who have active lupus.
- Complete
blood count (CBC)—This
test determines the number of white blood cells, red blood cells,
and platelets present in a sample of blood. Some rheumatic conditions
or drugs used to treat arthritis are associated with a low white
blood count (leukopenia), low red blood count (anemia), or low
platelet count (thrombocytopenia). When doctors prescribe medications
that affect the CBC, they periodically test the patient’s blood.
- Creatinine—This
blood test is commonly ordered in patients who have rheumatic
diseases to monitor for underlying kidney disease.
- Erythrocyte
sedimentation rate (sed rate)—This
blood test is used to detect inflammation in the body. Higher
sed rates indicate the presence of inflammation and are typical
of many forms of arthritis, such as rheumatoid arthritis and ankylosing
spondylitis, and many of the connective tissue diseases.
- Hematocrit
(PCV, packed cell volume)—This
test and the test for hemoglobin (a substance in the red blood
cells that carries oxygen through the body) measure the number
of red blood cells present in a sample of blood. A decrease in
the number of red blood cells (anemia) is common in people with
inflammatory arthritis and rheumatic diseases.
- Rheumatoid
factor—This test determines whether rheumatoid factor
is present in the blood. Rheumatoid factor is an antibody found
in the blood of most (but not all) people who have rheumatoid
arthritis. Rheumatoid factor may be found in many other diseases
besides rheumatoid arthritis, and sometimes in normal, healthy
people.
- Urinalysis—In
this test, a urine sample is studied for protein, red blood cells,
white blood cells, or casts. These abnormalities indicate kidney
disease, which may be seen in several rheumatic diseases such
as lupus or vasculitis. Some medications used to treat arthritis
can also cause abnormal findings on urinalysis.
- White
blood cell count (WBC)—This test determines the number
of white blood cells present in a sample of blood. The number
may increase as a result of infection or decrease in response
to certain medications, or with certain diseases, such as lupus.
Low numbers of white blood cells increase a person’s risk of infections.
|
|
Work
With Your Doctor To Limit Your Pain
The role
you play in developing your treatment plan is very important.
It is vital for you to have a good relationship with your
doctor so that you can work together. You should not be afraid
to ask questions about your condition or treatment. You must
understand the treatment plan and tell the doctor whether
or not it is helping you. Studies have shown that patients
who are well informed and participate actively in their own
care experience less pain and make fewer visits to the doctor
than other patients do.
|
|
|
X
Rays and Other Imaging Procedures
To see what
the joint looks like inside, the doctor may order X rays or other
imaging procedures. X rays provide an image of the bones, but they
do not show the cartilage, muscles, and ligaments. Other noninvasive
imaging methods such as computed tomography (CT or CAT), magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI), and arthrography (joint X ray) show the
whole joint. The doctor may also use an arthroscope (a small, flexible
tube that transmits the image of the inside of a joint to a video
screen) to examine damage to a joint. The arthroscope is inserted
into the affected joint through a very small incision in the skin.
This procedure, called arthroscopy, allows the doctor to see inside
the joint. Doctors also use arthroscopy to perform surgery for some
types of joint injury.
|
|
Next
Page
|
|
|
|
|
|