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Query: UMLS:C0018099 (gout)
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The condition of generalized periarthritis calcarea (hydroxyapatite deposition disease) is characterised by multiple periarticular calcification which can be localised around practically any joint and also in proximity to the spine. This calcification consists of hydroxyapatite crystals which are responsible for the episodes of acute, subacute or chronic periarticular or articular inflammation so typical of the condition. Because of this one can classify periarthritis calcarea along with gout and chondrocalcinosis in the group of crystal deposition diseases. The actual cause of the calcification remains unknown but it is probable that, along with hereditary factors, disturbances in metabolism play an important role. The diagnosis of generalised periarthritis is made from the characteristic X-ray picture in conjunction with the clinical findings and, on occasion, the demonstration of hydroxyapatite crystals in the affected tissues. In the differential diagnosis gout, chondrocalcinosis, various inflammatory rheumatic conditions and septic arthritis must be excluded and various calcification processes, particularly interstitial calcinosis and lipocal cinogranulomatosis, must also be considered. Since the etiology of the calcification remains unknown to specific treatment is available. Symptomatic treatment with colchicine is mostly inadequate which is why one often has recourse to the use of non-steroid anti-inflammatory drugs and corticosteroids.
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PMID:[Generalized periarthritis calcarea (generalized hydroxyapatite disease)]. 39 90

In 108 women over 80 (mean age 88,4 years, extremes 80 and 99 years) hospitalized in a geriatric service for various reasons, radiograms were made of both knees in the frontal aspect on standard film to detect calcinosis of the meniscus and chondrocalcinosis of the joint. In 25 women (23.1%) the radiographs revealed calcinosis of the meniscus with or without chondrocalcinosis. In these 25 cases a lateral X-ray was also made of the two knees, frontal X-rays were made of the pelvis, thumbs and shoulders. In 22 cases (88%) these revealed calcification of the fibrocartilages or articular cartilages in joints other than the knee. Seven of the 25 women had at least one attack of articular inflammation (especially of the knee) resembling a pseudo-gout crisis. The frequency of chronic arthropathies resembling arthroses was high in the 25 patients with chondrocalcinosis: 8 (32%) had an internal or external femoro-tibial arthrosis, as against 11 of the 83 patients (13%) of the same age without chondrocalcinosis, a significant difference. Eleven of the 25 women had signs of femororotular arthrosis on the lateral X-rays of the knees, 5 had coxarthrosis (with in 3 cases a radiological image of fibrocartilaginous or coxofemoral cartilaginous calcification). One women had chronic radiocarpal arthropathy evocative or chondrocalcinosis. Ten had a scaphotrapezoidal arthrosis, 5 arthrosis of the shoulder, 3 with radiological aspect of glenohumeral chondrocalcinosis.
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PMID:[Articular chondrocalcinosis after 80 years of age]. 64 41

A number of cells, chemotactic factors, and inflammatory mediators are implicated in the complex mechanisms underlying crystal-mediated inflammation. Interleukin-8, released from mononuclear cells that have been exposed to urate and other crystals, is a potent chemotaxin and activator of neutrophils. Experimental and clinical observations suggest that joint movements, local biomechanical factors, and previous joint damage may play a role in influencing the intensity of microcrystalline synovitis and the distribution of articular and periarticular crystal deposits in both calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate crystal deposition disease and gout. There are rare reports of extra-articular calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate crystal deposition in tendons, bursae, dura mater, and ligamentum flavum (with radiculomyelopathy) and of massive "tumoral," tophuslike, periarticular calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate crystal deposits. Synovial fluid levels of ATP, the main substrate for nucleoside triphosphate pyrophosphohydrolase ectoenzyme, which cleaves ATP-releasing inorganic pyrophosphate, are higher in patients with calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate crystal deposition disease than in those with other arthritides, and the levels correlate with inorganic pyrophosphate concentrations. Further reports of acute calcific periarthritis of the first metatarsophalangeal joint (hydroxyapatite pseudopodagra) in young women have been described. The mitogenic response of fibroblasts to stimulation with basic calcium phosphate crystals is accompanied by induction and secretion of collagenase and neutral proteases, implicating a role for the crystals in the pathogenesis of both synovial proliferation and joint damage in chronic basic calcium phosphate crystal-associated arthropathy. Subcutaneous cholesterol crystal deposition with tophus formation is extremely rare and has been described in a patient with scleroderma and calcinosis cutis.
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PMID:Calcium pyrophosphate crystal deposition disease and other crystal deposition diseases. 150 84

Degenerative arthritis of the finger joints is a very common disease in middle-aged and elderly patients, in females more frequently than in males. Concerning differential diagnosis rheumatoid arthritis and related conditions, gout, calcinosis, tumors and tumor-like lesions must be considered. Therapy is not necessary in every case. Usually treatment is required if the disease causes pains, joint instability or disabling deformity. Conservative treatment such as diet, physiotherapy, orthotics, local physical and antiphlogistic drug treatment or systemic application of non-steroid antiphlogistics should be preferred. Operative procedures such as removal of osteophytes, arthrodesis or arthroplasty are indicated if conservative treatment fails.
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PMID:[Idiopathic arthritis of the finger joints]. 785 47

Extraskeletal osseous and cartilaginous tumors and tumorlike conditions of the extremities can often be differentiated radiologically; for those that cannot, knowledge of the spectrum of lesions will allow a suitably ordered differential diagnosis. Of the osseous lesions--myositis ossificans, fibro-osseous pseudotumor, fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva, soft-tissue osteoma, and extraskeletal osteosarcoma--all but myositis ossificans are relatively rare. Myositis ossificans has a distinct mineralization pattern that can be observed radiologically as a peripheral rim of lamellar bone. Fibro-osseous pseudotumor typically occurs in the digits of the hand and lacks the well-defined zoning pattern of myositis ossificans. The cartilaginous entities include the true tumors, soft-tissue chondroma and extraskeletal chondrosarcoma, and the tumorlike process, synovial osteochondromatosis. The tumors are relatively rare; synovial osteochondromatosis commonly affects middle-aged men, especially in the knee, and is associated with osteoarthritis. The differential diagnosis for these extraskeletal osseous and cartilaginous lesions includes soft-tissue sarcoma, benign mesenchymoma, malignant mesenchymoma (rare), calcified tophi in gout, melorheostosis (rare), pilomatricoma (rare), and tumoral calcinosis (rare).
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PMID:From the archives of the AFIP. Extraskeletal osseous and cartilaginous tumors of the extremities. 835 73

We describe five cases of tumoral calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate crystal deposition disease (CPPDCD) and discuss the clinical, radiological and pathological features. Patients included 4 males and 1 female, ranging in age from 49 to 70 years (median, 63 yrs). The wrist was involved in two patients. The thumb, palmar aspect of the proximal phalanx of the middle finger and dorsum of the carpal bone of the hand were involved in one patient each. In one patient, a preoperative diagnosis of chondrosarcoma had been made. Macroscopically, the lesion was a circumscribed whitish-gray mass with a more or less chalky appearance, measuring between 1.0 to 6.2 cm (median, 2.5 cm). Histologically, all five lesions contained areas of calcification with crystal deposits and chondroid metaplasia. The majority of crystals were rhomboid in shape, characteristic of CPPD, but some needle-shaped crystals were also identified, which resembled urate crystals. A review of the 54 reported cases of tumoral CPPDCD including our series indicated that they could be divided into two categories based on anatomic location: central (head and neck) type (n = 33) and distal (extremity) type (n = 21). Patients of these two groups were not different with respect to age and gender, but those with the central type often presented with a painful mass (15 patients, 46%), or neurological disturbances (11 patients, 33%). Patients with the distal type presented with a painless mass or swelling (12 patients, 57%), but none had neurological signs, although 8 (38.1%) presented with acute attack similar to tophaceous gout. Tumoral CP-PDCD should be differentiated from tophaceous gout, tumoral calcinosis, and malignant or benign tumors.
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PMID:Tumoral calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate crystal deposition disease. A clinicopathologic analysis of five cases. 1148 81

Hematoxylin-eosin (H&E)-stained sections may not allow proper evaluation of birefringence properties of the crystals in the lesions of pseudogout, gout, and tumoral calcinosis. This study was undertaken to verify the application of a special stain that could facilitate the evaluation of the birefringence properties of these crystals for definitive diagnosis. We evaluated previously described nonaqueous alcoholic eosin staining (NAES) method based on the principle of using alcoholic eosin without hematoxylin and any other aqueous reagents for staining of formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue sections. Two observers, in a blinded fashion, evaluated the sections stained with routine H&E and NEAS method without the knowledge about clinical diagnosis. All pseudogout (nine sections from seven cases) and gout (eight sections from five cases) lesions demonstrated birefringence in the sections stained with NAES method. H&E-stained sections showing the respective diagnostic histomorphology failed to demonstrate the birefringent crystals by polarizing microscopy in all the eight sections from gout and in seven of nine sections from pseudogout. Only two H&E-stained sections showed scant calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate (CPPD) crystals in pseudogout. None of the three sections from two cases of tumoral calcinosis showed birefringence with either stain. We conclude that CPPD in pseudogout and monosodium urate in gout may not polarize in the routine H&E-stained sections. However, polarizing microscopy of sections stained with NAES method allowed demonstration of CPPD crystals with positive birefringence in pseudogout, MSU crystals with negative birefringence in gout, and calcium hydroxyapatite crystals without birefringence in tumoral calcinosis. Section stained with NAES method is a significantly useful adjunct to the routine H&E stain for proper evaluation of the crystals under polarizing microscope in these lesions.
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PMID:Evaluation of crystals in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue sections for the differential diagnosis of pseudogout, gout, and tumoral calcinosis. 1150 41

Musculoskeletal ultrasonography is an important imaging technique in the diagnosis of rheumatic diseases especially for early manifestation. It allows sensitive detection of small joint fluid collections as well as differentiation of soft tissue lesions and bone lesions. The following standard scans are suggested for sonographic evaluation of the elbow: 1) anterior humeroradial longitudinal scan, 2) anterior humeroulnar longitudinal scan to detect effusions, synovial proliferation, loose joint bodies, bone lesions (osteoarthritis/arthritis), 3) anterior transverse scan over the trochlea to evaluate these structures in an additional dimension, 4) posterior longitudinal scan and 5) posterior transverse scan of the olecranon fossa with flexed/extended elbow to evaluate the same objectives as the above mentioned scans and additionally to detect olecranon bursitis, and optional 6) distal dorsal longitudinal scan to differentiate soft tissue lesions such as rheumatoid nodules or gout tophi, 7) anterior transverse scan over the radius head to evaluate lesions of the radius head, tendopathy, calcinosis, 8) lateral humeroradial longitudinal scan to evaluate epicondylitis, 9) medial humeroulnar longitudinal scan to evaluate calcinosis, epicondylitis, signs of compression of the ulnar nerve. A linear transducer with a frequency of about 5-7.5 MHz is recommendable. The anterior distance between trochlea and the capitulum of the humerus between the bone and the joint-capsule of the elbow is > or = 2 mm in probable and > or = 3 mm in definite synovitis or effusions. Synovitis or effusions are probable if the difference between the right and left elbow is 1 mm, and they are definite if the difference is > or = 2 mm.
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PMID:[Technical aspects and value of arthrosonography in rheumatologic diagnosis. 4: Ultrasound of the elbow]. 1242 47

Metabolic diseases are common diseases in the Western world. Many of these diseases, including diabetes mellitus, hyperlipoproteinemia, gout, calcinosis, and hemochromatosis, are associated with skin diseases or often present with specific cutaneous signs. A knowledge of cutaneous manifestations helps to identify patients at risk, establish the internal diagnosis, and monitor the adverse effects of therapy.
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PMID:Cutaneous manifestations of metabolic diseases: uncommon presentations. 1617 79

Massive periarticular calcinosis of the soft tissues is a unique but not rare radiographic finding. On the contrary, tumoral calcinosis is a rare familial disease. Unfortunately, the term tumoral calcinosis has been liberally and imprecisely used to describe any massive collection of periarticular calcification, although this term actually refers to a hereditary condition associated with massive periarticular calcification. The inconsistent use of this term has created confusion throughout the literature. More important, if the radiologist is unfamiliar with tumoral calcinosis or disease processes that mimic this condition, then diagnosis could be impeded, treatment could be delayed, and undue alarm could be raised, possibly leading to unwarranted surgical procedures. The soft-tissue lesions of tumoral calcinosis are typically lobulated, well-demarcated calcifications that are most often distributed along the extensor surfaces of large joints. There are many conditions with similar appearances, including the calcinosis of chronic renal failure, calcinosis universalis, calcinosis circumscripta, calcific tendonitis, synovial osteochondromatosis, synovial sarcoma, osteosarcoma, myositis ossificans, tophaceous gout, and calcific myonecrosis. The radiologist plays a critical role in avoiding unnecessary invasive procedures and in guiding the selection of appropriate tests that can result in a conclusive diagnosis of tumoral calcinosis.
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PMID:Tumoral calcinosis: pearls, polemics, and alternative possibilities. 1670 60


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