Osteoarthritis

Definition

  • Degenerative, chronic arthropathy characterized by cartilage loss, new bone formation at joint margins & capsular fibrosis

Aetiology

Primary & Secondary

  • Primary
    • Idiopathic
  • Secondary
    • Traumatic
      • Fracture
      • Meniscectomy
      • Limb Malalignment
      • Instability
      • Hypermobility
    • Developmental/ Dysplasia
      • MED
      • DDH
      • Perthes
      • SUFE
    • Metabolic
      • CPPD deposition
      • Haemochromatosis
      • Ochronosis
    • Inflammatory
      • RA/ AS
      • Gout/ CPPD
      • Septic Arthritis
    • Neuropathic
    • Vascular
      • AVN
    • Endocrine
      • Acromegaly
      • Ochronosis

Two Categories of Cause

  • 1. Abnormal forces on normal cartilage
  • 2. Normal forces on abnormal cartilage
    • Ie. the cartilage fatigue threshold is overcome
  • Abnormal Forces
    • Force = Load/ Unit area
    • Increased Load
      • Both magnitude & frequency
      • Eg. Obese
    • Decreased Contact Area
  • Stress exceeds local threshold
    • Age
      • More stiff & less strong & elastic
      • Difference from Osteoarthritis poorly defined
        • Hypocellular
        • Decreased water (cf. Osteoarthritis with damaged cartilage imbibing water)
        • Increased Stiffness
    • CPP & HA deposition
      • Increased Softness
      • Chronic Inflammation

Risk Factors

  • Obesity
    • Especially Knee > Hip > Hand
    • 7x risk
    • Reason
      • Animal studies high fat diet » Osteoarthritis
      • ? Metabolic & mechanical reason
  • Heredity
    • Increased polyarthritic Osteoarthritis in families
    • ? Mutation Type II procollagen
  • Trauma
    • Cartilage injury at time of trauma
    • Malunion resulting in abnormal force vectors
  • Occupational
    • ? Repetitive use
  • Sport
    • Throwing athletes – elbow

Pathogenesis

  • Primarily mechanical rather than inflammatory
  • Failure of cartilage’s attempt at repair
  • Articular Cartilage
    • Key events are in the cartilage
    • Collagen network damaged & disorganized
    • Loss of proteoglycan which leach from matrix
    • Synthesis increases, but can’t keep up
      • Decreased Chondroitin Sulfate : Keratin Sulfate ratio
        • Decreased CS
        • Increased KS
      • Increase water
    • As a result of above the water content ↑ cartilage swells due to
      • Exposed collagen
      • Unwound PG
    • The stiff cartilage has ↓ lubrication ability
      • Due to ↑ permeability
      • Weeping
    • Elastohydrodynamic
    • Poor lubrication results in development of fissures on surface
      • IL1 released from synovium & chondrocytes
      • IL1 important mediator of metalloproteinases
    • Collagenase > Collagen
    • Stromelysin > PG
    • Gelatinase
  • Subchondral Bone
    • Sclerosis
    • Increase force transmitted to bone
      • Wolff’s law
        • Result is ↑ mechanical strain on overlying cartilage
      • Precipitates cartilage degeneration
    • Cysts
      • ? Due to
      • Stress fractures
      • Focal AVN
      • Synovial fluid pump through cracks
    • Osteophytes
      • ? Result of pizeoelectric forces from abnormal stress
      • ? Intramembranous ossification & endochondral
      • Increased surface area of joint

Pathology

  • Cardinal features are
    • Cartilage disintegration
    • Subchondral sclerosis
    • Subchondral cysts
    • Osteophyte formation
    • Capsular fibrosis
  • Cartilage Destruction
    • Macroscopic
      • At most heavily loaded part
      • Softened & fibrillated
      • Fibrillation propagated as fissures to subchondral bone
      • Fragments separate
      • Become loose bodies which can ↑ in size
      • Digested
      • Cartilage lost
      • Bone exposed & eburnated
    • Microscopic
      • Vertical clefts in surface
      • Superficial chondrocyte loss
      • Increased cellularity with clusters of chondrocytes
      • Duplication & irregularity of tidemark
      • Subchondral Plate Sclerosis
      • Dense & thickened
      • Marked osteoblastic activity
      • Increased vascularity
  • Subchondral Cyst Formation
    • Usually near maximum cartilage loss
    • May extend into metaphysis
    • Margins sclerotic
    • Filled with thick gelatinous material
  • Osteophyte formation
    • Bone at margins of joint
    • Cortex thickened & sclerotic
    • Prominent cement lines
    • Parallel to joint surface
    • Covered in hyaline cartilage
  • Capsular Fibrosis
    • Capsule markedly thickened
    • May be adherent
    • Hyalinization & amyloid
    • Synovial Thickening
    • Debris in synovial fluid incites phagocytosis by synovial cells
    • Breakdown products evoke mild inflammatory response
    • Slightly thick membrane

Epidemiology

Prevalence

  • Rises steeply with age
    • 15% at 40
    • 75% at 70
  • > 50% have symptoms

Clinical Features

  • Usually middle age
  • Atraumatic onset

Symptoms

  • Pain
    • Usual presentation
    • Insidious onset
    • Slow worsening
    • May be ill-defined or referred
    • Initially mechanical
    • Graduate to constant
    • Then night pain develops
    • Often worst 1st few steps
  • Stiffness
    • Occurs after inactivity
    • Becomes constant
    • AM stiffness not as prominent as RA
  • Swelling
    • Intermittent from effusion
    • Continuous due to capsular thickening or osteophytes
  • Deformity
    • From joint instability
  • Disability
    • Inability to perform ADL

Signs

  • Swelling
  • Effusion
  • Capsular / Synovial thickening
  • Osteophytes
  • Deformity
  • Muscle wasting
  • Tenderness
  • Restricted ROM
  • Crepitus
  • Instability
GradeDescription
Isoftening & swelling of cartilage
IIfragmentation & fissuring in area > 1.3cm
IIIas grade 2 but area > 1.3cm
IVerosion of cartilage down to bone
Outerbridge Classification

Patterns

Monoarticular or Pauciarticular Osteoarthritis

  • Pain & dysfunction in 1 or 2 of the large weight bearing joints
  • Two subgroups
    • Secondary Osteoarthritis
      • Osteoarthritis single joint from previous problem
      • Most common is knee from meniscectomy
    • Primary Hip Osteoarthritis
      • Usually early in male
      • Maybe due to mild dysplasia

Polyarticular Osteoarthritis

  • Usually middle-aged woman
  • Pain, swelling & stiffness in fingers
  • Characteristic knobbly appearance of IPJ
    • From osteophytes & soft tissue swelling
      • Heberden’s Nodes – DIP joints
      • Bouchard’s Nodes – PIP joints
  • Often affects knees
    • Medial & PFJ compartments
  • May also affect
    • Base of thumb
    • MTPJ of hallux
    • Facet Joints

Rapidly Destructive Osteoarthritis

  • Rapidly progressive loss of joint space
  • Usually affects hip

Investigations

Xrays

  • Asymmetric narrowing of joint space
  • Subchondral sclerosis
  • Subchondral cysts
  • Osteophytes
  • ± Evidence of previous disorders

Bone Scan

  • Increased activity in subchondral region
  • Reflects ↑ vascularity & new bone formation

Differential Diagnosis

  • DISH
  • AVN
  • CPPD
  • HA
  • RA
  • Psoriatic arthritis

Management

  • Early
    • Pain relief
    • Analgesics
    • NSAID
    • Local heat
    • Rest
    • Modify activities
    • Rest during flares
    • Physiotherapy
      • Maintain ROM
      • Maintain power
      • Load reduction
    • Weight loss
    • Walking stick
    • Avoid of unnecessary stress
    • Brace
  • Intermediate
    • Realignment osteotomy
    • A/S washout
    • SynVisc (hyaluronic acid) ?
  • Late
    • Arthrodesis
    • Arthroplasty

Controversies

  • Glucosamine & Chondroitin Sulfate
    • Animal trials
      • suggest possible cartilage protective role
    • Human clinical trials
      • Nearly all have financial backing from drug companies
      • Show variable benefit with respect to pain & function
      • Probably not alter natural history
      • Probably no harm (certainly less harmful than NSAID) & may be beneficial