Objective: Reactive arthritis (ReA) triggered by Chlamydia trachomatis or enteric bacteria such as yersinia, salmonella, Campylobacter jejuni, or shigella is an important differential diagnosis in patients presenting with the clinical picture of an undifferentiated oligoarthritis (UOA). This study was undertaken to evaluate the best diagnostic approach.
Patients And Methods: 52 patients with ReA, defined by arthritis and a symptomatic preceding infection of the gut or the urogenital tract, and 74 patients with possible ReA, defined by oligoarthritis without a preceding symptomatic infection and after exclusion of other diagnoses (UOA), were studied.
Med Klin (Munich)
October 2000
Symptoms: A 40-year-old woman presented with an arthritis of the knees and ankles, digital clubbing and thrombocytopenia.
Examinations: Blood tests proved an inflammatory reaction. Clinical findings were the above mentioned oligoarthritis and a periostitis of the long extremity bones.
Objective: To investigate the effect of long-term antibiotic treatment in patients with reactive arthritis (ReA) and undifferentiated oligoarthritis.
Methods: One hundred twenty-six patients were treated with ciprofloxacin (500 mg twice a day) or placebo for 3 months, in a double-blind, randomized study. Of these patients, 104 (48 treated with ciprofloxacin and 56 treated with placebo) were valid for clinical evaluation: 55 were diagnosed as having ReA with a preceding symptomatic urogenic or enteric infection and 49 as having undifferentiated oligoarthritis.
Background: Antigen-specific lymphocyte proliferation of synovial fluid mononuclear cells (SF MNC) has been reported repeatedly in reactive arthritis and Lyme arthritis; however, less information is available on serial investigations of SF MNC in the same patients.
Methods: In this study, the synovial lymphocyte proliferation to Yersinia, Chlamydia, Shigella and Borrelia burgdorferi was investigated sequentially at different time points in 28 patients with reactive arthritis, undifferentiated oligoarthritis or Lyme arthritis responding to one of these bacteria.
Results: The same bacterium was always recognized in arthritis triggered by Chlamydia, Shigella or Borrelia, with much variation in the proliferative response.
The cellular immune response seems to be important for the pathogenesis of reactive arthritis (ReA) and a bacteria-specific lymphocyte proliferation (LP) is often found in synovial fluid (SF) of ReA patients. However, the role of the bacteria-specific LP in peripheral blood (PB) is less well defined. In this study, we investigated 215 paired samples of SF and PB from patients with ReA (n = 65), undifferentiated oligoarthritis (n = 133) and undifferentiated spondylarthropathy (n = 17) to analyse the LP in PB and SF in relation to time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Bacteria play a crucial pathogenetic role in Lyme arthritis (LA), reactive arthritis (ReA), other forms of spondyloarthropathy (SpA), and possibly in undifferentiated oligoarthritis (uOligo). Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) technology has been applied to detect bacterial DNA of individual microbes in synovial fluid (SF) of patients with arthritides. We screened for DNA sequences of 8 bacterial species simultaneously in SF of patients with inflammatory joint disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To examine whether reactive arthritis (ReA) known to occur after a urogenital infection with Chlamydia trachomatis can also follow an infection with Chlamydia pneumoniae, a recently described species of Chlamydiae that is a common cause of respiratory tract infections.
Methods: Specific antibodies (microimmunofluorescence test) and lymphocyte proliferation to C trachomatis and C pneumoniae in paired samples of peripheral blood and synovial fluid were investigated in 70 patients with either reactive arthritis (ReA) or undifferentiated oligoarthritis (UOA).
Results: Five patients with acute ReA after an infection with C pneumoniae are reported.
Reactive arthritis (ReA) occurs after a urogenital infection usually with Chlamydia trachomatis or an enteritis due to Yersinia, Salmonella, Campylobacter or Shigella, Shigella, except during epidemics, is not considered to be a frequent cause of enteric reactive arthritis. However this might be due to the lack of a reliable antibody test, which makes diagnosis difficult. We compared synovial and peripheral blood lymphocyte proliferation to various bacterial antigens in 19 consecutive patients with ReA or undifferentiated oligoarthritis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUndifferentiated oligoarthritis (UOA) resembles clinically reactive arthritis (ReA), but does not fulfill the diagnostic criteria. In 46 patients with UOA, in 16 with ReA, and in 15 with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) the humoral and cellular immune response to the ReA-associated bacteria Chlamydia trachomatis, Yersinia enterocolitica, Shigella flexneri, Salmonella enteritidis, Campylobacter jejuni and Borrelia burgdorferi was investigated in paired samples of synovial fluid and peripheral blood. An antigen-specific lymphocyte proliferation in SF was found in 75% of the ReA and in 39% of UOA patients, but in none with RA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe studied the cellular and humoral immune response to Chlamydia trachomatis, Yersinia enterocolitica and Borrelia burgdorferi in paired samples of peripheral blood and synovial fluid (SF) in undifferentiated oligoarthritis, reactive arthritis (ReA) and rheumatoid arthritis. Antigen specific lymphocyte proliferation was found in SF of 43% of patients with ReA and 34% of patients with undifferentiated oligoarthritis. C.
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