51 research outputs found

    Osteoarthritis: the role of synovitis

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    Osteoarthritis is a prevalent disease causing pain and disability. It__s aetiology is unknown and no curative treatment is available. Osteoarthritis research is complicated due to heterogeneity of the disease, slow progression and poor association of clinical features with radiographic abnormalities, imaging modality of choice until now. In this thesis the role of synovitis in osteoarthritis is studied in relationship with clinical features and structural damage. The studies described made especially use of data derived a prospective follow-up study in symptomatic hand osteoarthritis patients. Synovitis detected on ultrasound was associated with clinical features and with progression of structural damage after 2.3 years in hand osteoarthritis. In erosive osteoarthritis, a subtype of hand osteoarthritis, more synovitis was found in all hand joints, even in non-erosive joints, when compared to joints of patients without erosive osteoarthritis. Also, associations were found between synovitis and erosive development at follow-up. All analyses were performed on joint level, using GEE analyses, thereby taking into account patient effects. Associations were poor/absent when analyses were done on patient level. This is important for further research. These results indicate that synovitis plays a role in pain and in development of structural damage in osteoarthritis and could be a therapeutic target.UBL - phd migration 201

    Small intra-individual variability of the preejection period justifies the use of pulse transit time as approximation of the vascular transit

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    Background Vascular transit time (VTT) is the propagation time of a pulse wave through an artery; it is a measure for arterial stiffness. Because reliable non-invasive VTT measurements are difficult, as an alternative we measure pulse transit time (PTT). PTT is defined as the time between the R-wave on electrocardiogram and arrival of the resulting pulse wave in a distal location measured with photoplethysmography (PPG). The time between electrical activation of the ventricles and the resulting pulse wave after opening of the aortic valve is called the pre-ejection period (PEP), a component of PTT. The aim of this study was to estimate the variability of PEP at rest, to establish how accurate PTT is as approximation of VTT. Methods PTT was measured and PEP was assessed with echocardiography (gold standard) in three groups of 20 volunteers: 1) a control group without cardiovascular disease aged 50 years, and 3) a group with cardiovascular risk factors, defined as arterial hypertension, dyslipidemia, kidney failure and diabetes mellitus. Results Per group, the mean PEP was: 1) 58.5 ± 13.0 ms, 2) 52.4 ± 11.9 ms, and 3) 57.6 ± 11.6 ms. However, per individual the standard deviation was much smaller, i.e. 1) 2.0-5.9 ms, 2) 2.8-5.1 ms, and 3) 1.6-12.0 ms, respectively. There was no significant difference in the mean PEP of the 3 groups (p = 0.236). Conclusion In conclusion, the intra-individual variability of PEP is small. A change in PT

    Do musculoskeletal ultrasound and magnetic resonance imaging identify synovitis and tenosynovitis at the same joints and tendons? A comparative study in early inflammatory arthritis and clinically suspect arthralgia

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    Objective: Ultrasound (US) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) are recommended in the diagnostic process of rheumatoid arthritis. Research on its comparability in early disease phases is scarce. Therefore, we compared synovitis and tenosynovitis detected by US and MRI on joint/tendon level. Methods: Eight hundred forty joints and 700 tendons of 70 consecutive patients, presenting with inflammatory arthritis or clinically suspect arthralgia, underwent US and MRI of MCP (2–5), wrist and MTP (1–5) joints at the same day. Greyscale (GS) and power Doppler (PD) synovitis were scored according to the modified Szkudlarek method (combining synovial effusion and hypertrophy) and the recently published EULAR-OMERACT method (synovial hypertrophy regardless of the presence of effusion) on static images. US-detected tenosynovitis was scored according to the OMERACT. MRI scans were scored according to the RAMRIS. Test characteristics were calculated on joint/tendon level with MRI as reference. Cut-off for US scores were ≥ 1 and ≥ 2 and for MRI ≥ 1. Results: Compared to MRI, GS synovitis according to EULAR-OMERACT (cut-off ≥ 1) had a sensitivity ranging from 29 to 75% for the different joint locations; specificity ranged from 80 to 98%. For the modified Szkudlarek method, the sensitivity was 68–91% and specificity 52–71%. PD synovitis had a sensitivity of 30–54% and specificity 97–99% compared to MRI. The sensitivity to detect GS tenosynovitis was 50–78% and the specificity 80–94%. For PD tenosynovitis, the sensitivity was 19–58% and specificity 98–100%. Conclusion: Current data showed that US is less sensitive than MRI in the early detection of synovitis and tenosynovitis, but resulted in only few non-specific findings. The higher sensitivity of MRI is at the expense of less accessibility and higher costs

    Influence of Conversion and Anastomotic Leakage on Survival in Rectal Cancer Surgery; Retrospective Cross-sectional Study

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    Osteoarthritis: the role of synovitis

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    Osteoarthritis is a prevalent disease causing pain and disability. It__s aetiology is unknown and no curative treatment is available. Osteoarthritis research is complicated due to heterogeneity of the disease, slow progression and poor association of clinical features with radiographic abnormalities, imaging modality of choice until now. In this thesis the role of synovitis in osteoarthritis is studied in relationship with clinical features and structural damage. The studies described made especially use of data derived a prospective follow-up study in symptomatic hand osteoarthritis patients. Synovitis detected on ultrasound was associated with clinical features and with progression of structural damage after 2.3 years in hand osteoarthritis. In erosive osteoarthritis, a subtype of hand osteoarthritis, more synovitis was found in all hand joints, even in non-erosive joints, when compared to joints of patients without erosive osteoarthritis. Also, associations were found between synovitis and erosive development at follow-up. All analyses were performed on joint level, using GEE analyses, thereby taking into account patient effects. Associations were poor/absent when analyses were done on patient level. This is important for further research. These results indicate that synovitis plays a role in pain and in development of structural damage in osteoarthritis and could be a therapeutic target
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