Bone and Soft-Tissue Disorders
= CPPD = PSEUDOGOUT = FAMILIAL CHONDROCALCINOSIS
= metabolic arthropathy characterized by deposition of calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate crystals in articular + periarticular tissues
- Most common crystalline arthropathy
Chondrocalcinosis = term for intra-articular calcifications with involvement of hyaline articular cartilage and fibrocartilage
Types:
- Osteoarthritic form (3560%)
- Pseudogout = acute synovitis (1020%) mimicking gout attack
- Rheumatoid form (26%)
- Pseudoneuropathic arthropathy (2%)
- Asymptomatic with tophaceous pseudogout (common)
Associated with: hyperparathyroidism, hypothyroidism, hemochromatosis, hypomagnesemia
Prevalence: widespread in older population; increasing with age; M÷F = 3÷2
- calcium pyrophosphate crystals in synovial fluid + within leukocytes (characteristic weakly positive birefringent rhomboid foci)
- acute / subacute / chronic joint inflammation
- polyarticular chondrocalcinosis (in fibro- and hyaline cartilage)
- large subchondral cyst (HALLMARK)
- numerous intraarticular bodies (fragmentation of subchondral bone)
- coalescing CPPD crystals → tophus-like deposits (rare) → significant articular destruction
Site: involvement of tendons, bursae, pinnae of the ear
- joint space narrowing + extensive subchondral sclerosis
- CPPD arthropathy resembles osteoarthritis!
- Hand
- Distribution: 1 CMC; 2nd + 3rd MCP joints; bilateral symmetric
- resembling degenerative joint disease (without DIP and PIP involvement)
- small hook-like osteophytes at radial aspect of metacarpal heads 2 & 3
- Wrist
Distribution: triangular fibrocartilage in distal radioulnar joints bilaterally, proximal carpal row joints at lunotriquetral + scapholunate ligaments
- calcification (chondrocalcinosis) of triangular fibrocartilage
- extensive narrowing / obliteration of joint space between distal radius + scaphoid → destruction of trapezioscaphoid space:
- incorporation of scaphoid into articular surface of radius
- prominent cysts
- scapholunate separation (= ligament tear) → scapholunate advanced collapse (SLAC
- Knee
Distribution: especially meniscus + cartilage of patellofemoral joint
- medial femorotibial + patellofemoral compartments commonly involved simultaneously (as in osteoarthritis) but with greater osseous destruction + fragmentation
- disproportionate narrowing of patellofemoral joint
- Spine
- chondrocalcinosis / calcifications of outer fibers of annulus fibrosus of lumbar spine resembling syndesmophytes; NEVER in nucleus pulposus
DDx: ochronosis (in nucleus pulposus) - vertical radiodense line in symphysis pubis
Other locations:- pelvis (sacroiliac joint, symphysis)
- shoulder (glenoid), hip (labrum), elbow, ankle, acromioclavicular joint