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Inflammatory Bone Spur Formation in Psoriatic Arthritis Is Different From Bone Spur Formation in Hand Osteoarthritis
Author(s) -
Finzel Stephanie,
Sahinbegovic Enijad,
Kocijan Roland,
Engelke Klaus,
Englbrecht Matthias,
Schett Georg
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
arthritis and rheumatology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.106
H-Index - 314
eISSN - 2326-5205
pISSN - 2326-5191
DOI - 10.1002/art.38794
Subject(s) - medicine , osteoarthritis , spur , psoriatic arthritis , cartilage , quantitative computed tomography , arthritis , osteoporosis , anatomy , bone density , pathology , alternative medicine
Objective To investigate the different patterns of bone spur formation in psoriatic arthritis (PsA) and hand osteoarthritis (OA), using high‐resolution peripheral quantitative computed tomography (QCT). Methods The study group comprised 70 subjects (25 patients with PsA, 25 patients with hand OA, and 20 healthy controls). The 2 patient groups were similar with regard to age and sex distribution and clinical involvement of the metacarpophalangeal (MCP) joints. All patients underwent high‐resolution peripheral QCT scanning of the second, third, and fourth MCP joints of the dominantly affected hand. Demographic and disease‐specific data were recorded, and the number, size, and distribution of bone spurs were assessed and compared between patients with PsA and patients with hand OA. Results The overall number and size of bone spurs were similar in patients with PsA and patients with hand OA. However, localization of lesions within individual joints was substantially different between patients with PsA and those with hand OA. In PsA, bone spurs dominated the radial sides of the joints (for the metacarpal head of the second joint, P < 0.001 versus hand OA; for the base of the second phalangeal joint, P < 0.001 versus hand OA), whereas the palmar and dorsal quadrants were the predilection sites in hand OA. Detailed anatomic analysis showed that bone spurs in the entheseal regions were prominent in patients with PsA but rare in patients with hand OA, and that bone spurs in patients with hand OA typically emerged at the cartilage–bone interphase and the joint margins. Conclusion Our findings show that the overall number and size of bone spurs are similar in patients with PsA and patients with hand OA. Nonetheless, the anatomic sites of bone proliferation are different between these 2 groups of patients.

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