The clinical implication of cervical interspinous bursitis in the diagnosis of polymyalgia rheumatica.

نویسنده

  • Miguel A Gonzalez-Gay
چکیده

Polymyalgia rheumatica (PMR) is a relatively common inflammatory condition characterised by pain, aching and morning stiffness involving the shoulder and hip girdles and the neck. 2 Patients are generally older than 50 years and the erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) and C-reactive protein (CRP) are usually elevated. PMR may occur as an isolated disease or it may be observed in the setting of giant cell arteritis (GCA). Arthroscopic studies have confirmed the presence of synovitis in proximal joints of patients with PMR. However, the cause of musculoskeletal symptoms in these patients is not clearly defined because joint synovitis may only partially explain the diffuse discomfort along with involvement of periarticular structures. Interestingly, MRI and ultrasonography (US) studies disclosed bilateral inflammation of subacromial and subdeltoid bursae in association with synovitis of the glenohumeral joints and tenosynovitis of the biceps in patients with PMR. 6 More recently, using MRI and US, Cantini et al also confirmed the presence of trochanteric bursitis and, less commonly, iliopsoas and ischiogluteal bursitis in PMR patients. These studies support the pivotal role of the involvement of extraarticular synovial structures, in particular bursae, in PMR. Shoulder pain is the most common and the presenting feature in patients with PMR. 2 By contrast, pelvic and cervical involvement is less commonly observed. In this regard, in a population-based study from Northwest Spain, the frequency of shoulder girdle involvement was almost 100% in patients with isolated PMR and PMR associated with GCA. However, neck involvement was observed in 74% of individuals with isolated PMR and 67% of those with PMR associated with GCA. Population-based studies have confirmed that isolated PMR is generally a benign condition and most long-term survival studies have shown no increased mortality in patients with this condition. Although the diagnosis of PMR is relatively straightforward when typical symptoms are present, none of the clinical and laboratory findings in PMR are specific. In this regard, polymyalgia manifestation may occur in patients with infections, neoplasms or other rheumatic diseases. 14 Due to this, the search for findings that may support a diagnosis of PMR is of primary importance in some cases. It may be especially true when cervical pain is the predominant symptom. With respect to this, patients with crowned dens syndrome, condition related to microcrystalline deposition and radiological calcification of the cruciform ligament around the odontoid process, may present with acute cervical pain fever, neck stiffness and biological inflammatory syndrome. Additionally, we have recently reported seven patients with late onset undifferentiated spondyloarthritis presenting with PMR features. Taking these observations together, an important step forward in our understanding of the aetiology of cervical pain associated to PMR may be to establish the presence of objective data that may also support the presence of neck involvement in patients with PMR. Another important point may be to establish some specific features that may be useful in discriminating neck involvement in the setting of PMR from those observed in other conditions that may also yield cervical pain. In the early and middle 1980s, Bywaters and colleagues reported three elegant studies addressing important information on spinal anatomy. In one of them, Bywaters described the presence of bursal spaces between the cervical interspinous processes at necropsy in 14 of 27 ‘‘normal’’ adult necks. The presence of bursae was most frequently located at the C6–C7 interspinous space. Interestingly, the cervical interspinous space was the seat of crystallopathic disease in 2 of these 14 individuals. Calcified deposits suggestive of calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate (CPPD) and hydroxyapatite crystal deposition in interspinous bursae were observed in one them, and areas occupied by CPPD crystals along with areas occupied by hydroxyapatite were found in the other. In the same necropsy study, Bywaters also aimed to determine whether cervical bursitis was present in five patients with juvenile chronic arthritis and in nine patients with adult-onset rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Interestingly, two of the nine patients with RA showed bursae between the interspinous processes but without any specific feature of RA involvement. However, cervical bursitis characterised by synovial lining hyperplasia and erosions of the spinous processes was demonstrated in two of the nine patients with the adult form of RA and also in two patients with juvenile chronic arthritis. The results reported by Bywaters raise a couple of questions that we should consider in the assessment of patients with rheumatic diseases with severe neck symptoms. First, we wonder whether the clinical evidence of cervical interspinous bursitis may be of some help for establishing the diagnosis of inflammatory rheumatic diseases involving the lower cervical spine. Second, in a further step, it may be of interest to determine whether the presence of cervical bursitis at the lower cervical interspinous space may help discriminate specific inflammatory conditions with preferential involvement of the neck. To address these issues, using MRI of the cervical spine, Salvarani et al (see page 758) studied 12 consecutive, untreated new patients with PMR along with a control group that included 13 patients with neck complaints (5 patients with fibromyalgia, 2 patients with cervical osteoarthritis and 6 patients with spondyloarthritis). Interestingly, in all 12 patients with PMR, MRI disclosed the presence of fluid in the cervical interspinous bursae at the C5–C7 level, suggesting bursitis. Fluid accumulation in the cervical interspinous bursae at the same level was also found in 6 of the 13 control patients (3 patients with fibromyalgia, 2 with psoriatic spondylitis and 1 with cervical osteoarthritis). Of note, from four patients with primary ankylosing spondylitis, none showed cervical bursitis. More importantly, Correspondence to: Miguel A Gonzalez-Gay, Rheumatology Division, Hospital Xeral-Calde, c) Dr Ochoa s/n, 27004 Lugo, Spain; [email protected] Editorial

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عنوان ژورنال:
  • Annals of the rheumatic diseases

دوره 67 6  شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 2008