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For further information, see CMDT Part 22-32: Psoriatic Arthritis

KEY FEATURES

Essentials of Diagnosis

  • Psoriasis precedes arthritis in 80% of cases

  • Arthritis usually asymmetric, with "sausage" appearance of fingers and toes; polyarthritis that may resemble rheumatoid arthritis (RA) also occurs

  • Sacroiliac joint involvement common

  • Radiographic findings

    • Osteolysis

    • Pencil-in-cup deformity

    • Relative lack of osteoporosis

    • Bony ankylosis

    • Asymmetric sacroiliitis

    • Atypical syndesmophytes

General Considerations

  • Although psoriasis usually precedes the onset of arthritis, arthritis may precede skin disease by up to 2 years or occur simultaneously in ∼20% of cases

  • Arthritis is at least five times more common in patients with severe psoriatic skin disease than in those with only mild skin findings

CLINICAL FINDINGS

  • The patterns or subsets of psoriatic arthritis include

    • A symmetric polyarthritis that resembles RA but usually, fewer joints are involved

    • An oligoarticular form that may lead to considerable destruction of the affected joints

    • The distal interphalangeal (DIP) joints are primarily affected

      • Early, this may be monarticular

      • Joint involvement is often asymmetric

      • Pitting of the nails and onycholysis frequently accompany DIP involvement

    • A severe deforming arthritis (arthritis mutilans) with osteolysis

    • A spondylitic form in which sacroiliitis and spinal involvement predominate; 50% of these patients are HLA-B27-positive

  • Severe psoriatic skin disease is likely

  • Occasionally, however, patients may have a single patch of psoriasis (typically hidden in the scalp, gluteal cleft, or umbilicus) and are unaware of its presence a detailed search for cutaneous lesions is essential

  • Psoriatic lesions may have cleared when arthritis appears; in such cases, the history is most useful in diagnosing previously unexplained cases of mono- or oligoarthritis

  • Nail pitting is sometimes a clue

  • "Sausage" swelling, or dactylitis, of one or more digits is a common manifestation of enthesopathy in psoriatic arthritis

  • Uveitis or inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) (or both) may be present

DIAGNOSIS

Laboratory Tests

  • Elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate in ∼50% of patients

  • Rheumatoid factor and anti-CCP antibodies are not present

  • Uric acid levels

    • May be high, reflecting the active turnover of skin affected by psoriasis

    • There is a correlation between the extent of psoriatic involvement and the level of uric acid, but gout is no more common than in patients without psoriasis

  • Desquamation of the skin may also reduce iron stores

Imaging Studies

  • Radiographic findings are most helpful in distinguishing the disease from other forms of arthritis

  • There are marginal erosions of bone and irregular destruction of joint and bone, which, in the phalanx, may give the appearance of a sharpened pencil

  • Fluffy periosteal new bone may be marked, especially at the insertion of muscles and ligaments into bone

  • Such changes will also be seen along the shafts of metacarpals, metatarsals, and phalanges

  • Psoriatic spondylitis causes asymmetric sacroiliitis and syndesmophytes

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