Expert patients

Idea came from Prof Kate Lorig, rheumatologist in US. Trained lay educators had better outcomes than conventional clinic appointments. In 2001, became an NHS programme, aimed at cutting costs of chronic disease.

Technology has aided this massively – see “E-patients“. But of course variations in access to technology and tech literacy.

Survey of UK public found 42% had read online healthcare feedback esp researching treatment, drug, test. Mostly younger female, high income, high internet use.  Only 6% of public remember being asked to give feedback on health care experience – ever. 28% of doctors aware of feedback relating to an episode of care they were involved in. This shows a lack of organisational preparedness, given government policy paper for future of data and online services in healthcare. 

Patient centred networks not well understood. Can have links to health professionals, but can also be tied to industry/commercial interests, may even be driven by industry.  Online resources scored higher with e-patients for convenience, emotional support, empathy, death and dying, in depth medical information, practical help.  Specialist physicians rated highest for diagnosis, technical knowledge (just), managing condition after diagnosis.  So online resources score highest where medics poorest and vice versa.  So combination of both ideal!  Also, medics come and go.  Some patient groups have published their own research eg GIST group.

But behaviour change, specifically when talking about self-efficacy, is very individual and psychology focussed. Less exploration of social influences, other than focus on peer modelling.

Foucault, of course, was fascinated by how people can become obedient, self governing, and how this is produced by the efforts of “pastoral power”, in a similar way to the Christian church and the process of confession.

Trisha Greenhalgh would say that although collaboration between patient and doctor is important, it’s still just one aspect of a whole system that includes community, material conditions, law/policy, social deprivation, cultural norms etc.

Guillain Barre Syndrome

An acute inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculopathy, almost certainly autoimmune since antibodies to ganglioside are often found. Some cases are purely motor, others are mixed motor and sensory. About a quarter follow Campylobacter infection, where there is clear homology between bacterial epitopes and gangliosides. Strongly associated with HIV in the tropics.

Usually gradual onset over a few days but rarely can be over a few hours. Diarrhoeal illness a few weeks previously suggests campylobacter. Presents with pain, numbness, paraesthesiae, weakness. Weakness may initially be proximal or distal (distal alone suggests “withering” axonopathy eg toxin). Facial nerves often affected (see Miller Fisher syndrome, below).

Reflexes usually lost early but sometimes persist. Autonomic features may occur (vagal nerve involvement) eg urinary retention, sinus tachycardia, ileus. The degree of paralysis can be extreme – up to 20% require ventilation.

Gradually worsens, peaks at around 2 weeks (by definition, within 4 weeks). Then there is a variable plateau phase. 20% will have persisting disability; fatigue is common. Myelinopathy usually recovers quite rapidly; axonopathy takes months to years. Neuronopathy is where the dorsal root ganglion cell body itself is damaged, and may never recover. [Am Fam Physician 2020]

The diagnosis is often pretty obvious but investigations should be done to rule out other causes. If purely motor, differential includes hypokalaemia, polio, myasthenia gravis, botulism, acute myopathy.

  • MRI brain and spinal cord – low threshold! Consider if acute or rapidly progressive, predominantly sensory symptoms (including back pain), predominant sphincter disturbance at presentation, clear sensory or marked motor level. MRI may show enhancing nerves esp cranial nerves, but more usefully excludes:
    1. a spinal lesion (eg prolapsed disc, haemorrhage or tumour)
    2. para-sagittal cerebral lesion, which can present as acute painful flaccid paraparesis
    3. Acute Transverse Myelitis
    4. ADEM
  • Lumbar puncture – Elevated CSF protein has high PPV but not specific (and may be normal within seven days of onset). Pleocytosis eg >50 cells/mm3 suggests another diagnosis. In children, lumbar puncture is not always necessary to make a definite diagnosis, and should be reserved for cases where the diagnosis is in doubt. Oligoclonal bands present in CSF and plasma.
  • Nerve conduction studies – may be normal in the first week! Demyelinating pattern. May be useful in children who present with atypical features, normal CSF protein after the first week following presentation or in categorising the subtype of GBS – for example, Acute motor axonal neuropathy (AMAN)
  • U&E (hypokalaemia)
  • Creatine kinase (myositis)
  • Acute and convalescent serum for viral and mycoplasma antibody titres (Mycoplasma pneumoniae, EBV, CMV, Borrelia burgdorferi).
  • Throat swab; stool microscopy, culture and sensitivities (Campylobacter jejuni)
  • Antiganglioside antibodies (for example, anti-GQ1b antibodies in Miller-Fisher syndrome)

Monitor respiratory ability with serial peak flows.

Consider also:

  • Heavy metals and toxins (lead, mercury, arsenic, organophosphates)
  • Urinary porphyrins
  • Botulinum toxin identification (stool, serum) (but eyes usually involved)
  • Diphtheria (but eyes usually involved)
  • Drug toxicology screen
  • trial of intravenous edrophonium (Tensilon) and/or oral pyridostigmine (minimum of five days) for myasthenia gravis if investigations have been normal or negative
  • Enteroviruses incl Poliomyelitis – fever, asymmetry of weakness, lack of sensory involvement, CSF findings and PCR from throat/stool
  • In endemic regions, tick bite paralysis closely resembles AIDP. Seasonal, affects young children predominantly. CSF protein is usually normal and the electrophysiological studies are consistent with a pre-synaptic defect at the neuromuscular junction rather than a peripheral neuropathy. The patient usually recovers rapidly after removal of the tick but full return of strength may take several weeks. Failure to detect the tick may result in the death of the patient.

The initial progressive phase lasts 10-30 days. If deterioration continues beyond four weeks, the diagnosis of GBS is pretty much excluded – suggests chronic inflammatory polyneuropathy (CIDP). In rapid, aggressive disease complete quadriplegia can develop in 2-5 days; apart from need for respiratory support, autonomic involvement can provoke life-threatening arrhythmias and hypertension. Aspiration pneumonia is another major risk.

Children should be admitted to PICU if they have:

  • flaccid tetraparesis
  • severe rapidly progressive course
  • reduced vital capacity at or below 20 ml/kg
  • bulbar palsy with symptoms
  • autonomic cardiovascular instability viz persistent hypertension or labile blood pressure, or arrhythmias.

Plasma exchange is gold standard. Surprisingly, steroids do not appear to have any benefit (cf CIDP), as they can sometimes make things worse or slow the recovery. Perhaps nerve damage at presentation is already programmed/complete? Or do they impair healing? IVIG 0.4g/kg for 5 days (started as soon as possible and ideally within first 2 weeks, although benefit may extend up to 4 weeks) is as effective as plasma exchange (in adults, Cochrane) and probably quicker as well as safer. The conventional dose of immunoglobulin is a total of 2 g/kg, over 3-5 days, whatever protocol that avoids waste best! In kids, 250 ml/kg plasma exchange or roughly a triple-volume exchange probably best.

For pain which is resistant to conventional analgesia, gabapentin and carbamazepine may be useful.

Mortality in childhood GBS is less than 5%. Deaths may be caused by ventilatory failure (rare now), cardiac arrhythmias, dysautonomia and pulmonary embolism. Full recovery within 3-12 months is experienced by 90-95% of children with GBS; that leaves 5-10% with permanent neuro deficits, but most of those tend to have only minor disability.

Subtypes

Miller-Fisher syndrome = ophthalmoplegia with ataxia & absent reflexes. GQ1b antibodies are highly sensitive and specific, found particularly in ocular motor nerves. Beware botulism and diphtheria, which also affect eyes!

PMID 18032711

Brutalist medicine

“Architecture of medicine” a better metaphor than “art of medicine”, as it has a clear purpose? 

So Brutalist medicine: where so intentionally functional that it erects its own barriers. Eg protocols, scoring systems, electronic records that become monuments to themselves. But you can perhaps defend Brutalism’s desire to avoid unnecessary adornments.

[Benjamin Mazer, Yale-New Haven school of medicine]

Acute pancreatitis

Incidence increasing, approaching that of adults!? INSPPIRE international study. 

Diagnosis

Amylase 3x upper limit, radiology positive. 

Cullen’s and Grey Turner signs (umbilical and flank bruising respectively).

Amylase level not prognostic. False positive liver/renal impairment, GI inflammation.  False negative in 10%, esp drug induced!

Lipase more specific, only done in Huddersfield?! Stays high for longer.

Low calcium, high glucose seen.

Diagnosis mostly clinical. USS usually sensitive, else CT – more for complications (focal or diffuse enlargement, heterogeneous enhancement, irregular or shaggy outline, oedema of surrounding fat).

AXR may show sentinel loop, free gas (loss of psoas shadow). CXR for effusion.

Causes

I GET SMASHED

  • idiopathic (25% in children)
  • gall stones
  • ethanol
  • trauma
  • steroids – and other drugs, esp anti-epileptics, immunosuppressants eg azathioprine, cancer drugs.
  • mumps (even without parotitis), malignancy
  • autoimmune
  • scorpion sting!

But misses IBD, sepsis, Mycoplasma (early or late), genetic causes! 

Management

Prognosis good in children. Scoring systems in adults eg Modified Glasgow-Imrie not applicable, various paediatric versions, of debatable value. 

Fluid resuscitation then 1.5-2x maintenance requirements (not much evidence – don’t be afraid of positive balance! Keep urine output at 1ml/kg/hr), analgesia, early enteral nutrition if possible (to avoid bacterial translocation) else parenteral.

Antibiotics only for suspected sepsis.

Surgery eg necrosectomy. 

1/3 acute recurrent (defined as recurrence after full recovery). Often anatomical problems. Chronic associated with genetic disorders, metabolic, autoimmune.

ERCP for anatomical causes. Pancreatic enzymes. Non opiate pain management eg tricyclics. 

[NASPGHAN 2018 Guidelines]

Ophthalmia neonatorum

Sticky eyes pretty common in babies, especially if tear duct blocked (usually sorts itself out eventually, but can take months).

Otherwise typical bacteria and viruses eg Haemophilus, HSV, adenovirus.

Concern however, especially if severe, that sexually transmitted infection responsible, and risk to eye.

Neisseria gonococcus

Gonococcus onset 0-5 days after birth. Gram neg diplococci on microscopy is a big clue because nothing else looks like it. Risk of haematogenous spread, especially joint.

Single dose cefotaxime effective!

Chlamydia trachomatis

Chlamydia does not gram stain in conventional way, it is an intracellular pathogen and will not grow on standard culture swabs.

Typically lower respiratory tract signs/symptoms as well.

Blood stained discharge has 100% PPV and specificity for chlamydia in Hong Kong study (n=90)!

Treat with oral erythromycin.



Systemic onset JIA

Features

  • Prolonged pyrexia (see below)
  • Intermittent characteristic rash (see below)
  • Raised CRP, ESR, ferritin (esp over 1000 – also haemophagocytic syndromes, haemochromatosis, liver disorders, malignancy)
  • Poor response to IVIG (cf Kawasakis)
  • Leucocytosis (neutrophilia, can be leukaemoid)
  • Thrombocytosis
  • Arthritis
  • Hepatosplenomegaly
  • Generalised lymphadenopathy
  • Pericarditis

Can be systemically very unwell and potentially life threatening complications may occur early in the disease course (eg pericarditis, macrophage activation syndrome or HLH, sepsis). See the Big Sick film from Netflix. Start high dose corticosteroids after careful exclusion of other diagnoses, especially infection, Kawasaki disease, and malignancy – difficult when arthritis is absent! But maybe you have to look harder…

Systemic features may predate the arthritis by several weeks and occasionally longer. Typically involves small joints of the hands and wrists, ankles, hips, knees, and cervical spine – about 30% ultimately develop severe polyarthritis.

There are no pathognomic tests or agreed diagnostic criteria for SOJIA! Classic features:

  • quotidian (=daily) evening spiking temperature, that returns to or falls below baseline by the morning.
  • Rash is faint, salmon pink maculopapular, most obvious during pyrexia. Usually not on the face so easily missed – typically on the trunk, inner thigh and axillae, especially on areas of trauma or pressure (Koebner phenomenon).

Treat with IV methylprednisolone pulses (30mg/kg over 4 hours, max 1g, once daily for 3 days) and ibuprofen (seems better than piroxicam for SOJIA!). Oral prednisolone may then be used while methotrexate is introduced.

Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis

Seven subtypes – only diagnose when symptoms for at least 3 months:

  • Oligo (persistent or extended) – Arthritis affecting up to four joints during the first six months of disease. If subsequently more than four joints are affected the term extended oligoarthritis is used, otherwise the term persistent oligoarthritis is used. This is the most common pattern (50% of all JIA) and usually involves large joints of the lower limbs, especially knees. These children have the best prognosis but are at high risk of asymptomatic uveitis (30%, and risk highest in monoarthritis!) and therefore must be screened regularly. In aggressive disease, can develop within 3 months of presentation. Girls mostly ankles, knees or wrists, 50% will be ANA positive and particularly associated with chronic (even subclinical) uveitis. Boys tend to get sacroiliitis and are HLA B27 positive, which is associated with acute uveitis…
  • Polyarthritis (rheumatoid factor -ve) – 5+ joints affected during first 6 months. Tends not to be hips! 17% of all JIA. Severity is very variable.
  • Polyarthritis (RF +ve) – 7% of all JIA. Symmetrical polyarthritis, nodules, and Rheumatoid factor IgM +ve at least twice, 3 months apart. Typically adolescent girls of 10yrs+. Prognosis is guarded as early joint damage often occurs.
  • Systemic onset – SOJIA, 11% of all JIA. Can occur at any age, often pre-school but rarely in infancy. Males and females affected equally.
  • Enthesitis related arthritis – inflammation of tendon insertions eg sternum, around knee (at 2,6 and 10 o’clock positions), tibial tubercle, achilles/plantar, tibialis anterior, flexor digitorum insertion in foot. Often dactylitis. Asymmetric, distal lower limbs large joints commonly affected, high risk of developing ankylosing spondylitis in early adulthood – spine rarely affected early on. BASMI score consists of 5 measurements of spinal mobility. The group also includes arthritis or enthesitis with at least two of:
    • tenderness of the sacroiliac joint and/ or inflammatory spinal pain
    • HLA B27 positive (10% of normal population)
    • family history in a first or second degree relative of HLA B27 related disease (ie arthritis, IBD, Reiter’s, uveitis)
    • anterior uveitis (usually symptomatic with redness, pain and blurred vision)
    • arthritis after 8 years of age in a boy (esp large lower limb joints).
  • Psoriatic arthritis – esp umbilicus, behind ear, scalp. The arthritis is usually asymmetrical, mixed large/small joints. Often NOT psoriasis, at least initially, but includes children with arthritis and at least two of:
    • dactylitis (fat, sore fingers!)
    • pitting or onycholysis of nails
    • psoriasis in a first degree relative
  • Other arthritis – This group is for children with idiopathic arthritis that does not fit the other groups (or into more than one! eg Crohns & UC associated arthritis, features overlap). Downs syndrome children can get a resistant polyarthritis.

Presentation

Clinically, history of pain, swelling, stiffness. Pain is usually not severe, and often avoided completely by adapting movement; can occur at night, and occurs in the joint line. Degree of pain does NOT predict severity of synovitis. Swelling may be due to effusion or bony overgrowth. Stiffness not so severe as to cause gelling ie sitting still leads to freezing (cf myasthenia gravis, hypermobility). Bony overgrowth, discrepant leg length (longer with inflammation! Leads to postural scoliosis), wasting show chronicity.

Differentials:

  • Benign hypermobility – typically get pain related to exertion, short lasting although may occur at night.
  • Reactive arthritis – can last up to 3/12.
  • Rubella, chronic meningococcus
  • HSP before rash develops
  • Rheumatic fever
  • Behçets – mouth/genital ulcers, uveitis.
  • SLE (high ESR with normal CRP, low WCC/platelets, autoantibodies) or dermatomyositis (stiffness, rather than true arthritis – proximal muscle weakness, high CK)

Investigations:

  • Mono JIA usually CRP <7 – else beware infection
  • Micro of joint fluid nonspecific
  • XR – to exclude tumour etc. Lucency in metaphysis may be marrow infiltration in leukaemia, Brodie’s abscess or Langerhans’ histiocytosis. Moth eaten appearance and onion skin periosteal reaction suggests tumour or infection.
  • RF v non specific, like autoantibodies, only significant in discriminating teenage girls with adult type Rheumatoid Arthritis.
  • US is good but operator dependent. MRI probably better, predicts extension in mono, 4-11/12 before clinical signs.

Treatment

NSAIDs and intra-articular steroids work quickly. Ibuprofen can be given at high dose (10mg/kg qds), else Diclofenac 3-5mg/kg in 3-4 divided doses, max 150mg. Piroxicam is once daily, which is convenient but it probably has more GI/cutaneous side effects. No longer considered appropriate for acute pain.

Routine NSAIDs are probably pointless; if you need regular anti-inflammatories, you should probably be on a disease modifying agent eg methotrexate.

Joint injections are given under general anaesthetic in young children or with entonox in older children. Lederspan (triamcinolone) 1mg/kg max 40mg used for big joint, 0.5mg/kg for wrist, TMJ. Knuckles will only take 0.1-0.2ml before they start to leak (which leads to subcut atrophy). Injecting multiple (eg >6) sites can result in Cushings for 3-6/12. Better to pulse methylpred? (Kennilog is another formulation, but seems to give more Cushings). Most patients tolerate injections well and have no loss of function immediately after; physio is usually started after 24hr. How often? Balance of steroid effects and uncontrolled joint disease…

Methotrexate Side effects: GI (nause, ulceration, diarrhoea), hepatotoxicity (reversible elevations of serum liver enzymes eg 3x upper limit normal common), Pulmonary (oedema, pleuritic pain, pulmonary fibrosis, interstitial pneumonitis), mood changes, Renal (haematuria, dysuria, renal failure) – plus usual chemo stuff ie bone marrow suppression.

BNFc

Methotrexate is the disease modifying drug of choice – early use helps to reduce joint damage and minimise the exposure to, and side effects of, corticosteroids. Well tolerated in most children but often causes nausea the day after administration (so usually given on Friday to avoid affecting school). Avoid alcohol, as potentiates risk of cirrhosis. Takes 6-8 weeks to become effective so cover interval with intravenous methylprednisolone. The theoretical risk of malignancy and infertility has not so far been borne out in long term outcome studies. Folic acid improves tolerability but not clear what regimen to use – BNF suggests 5mg once weekly or 1mg daily, theoretically it should not be given within 24 hours of the MTX [so once weekly sounds easier]. Methotrexate is given once a week at 10-25mg/m2 – can be oral but subcut route improves bioavailability at doses beyond 10mg/m2. Metojet has better shelf life (10 months). Regular blood tests to monitor inflammatory markers and side effects eg monthly for 6 months then 3 monthly thereafter. Not great for axial disease ie HLA B27.

Steroids are useful for treating acute flares. Methylprednisolone can be given once daily for 3/7 to control severe exacerbations, then once weekly thereafter (30mg/kg, max 1g). Don’t work well for axial disease though ie HLA B27 (although may be good for peripheral joints) – TNF blockade (ie etanercept or infliximab) effective.

Patients who are refractory to high dose parenteral methotrexate are considered for monoclonal antibodies such as Etanercept/infliximab (TNF antibody), autologous stem cell transplantation, or very high dose immunosuppression.

  • Etanercept (Embrel) used to be twice weekly subcut injection but most now do once weekly 0.8mg/kg. £10 000pa.
  • Infliximab is an infusion, given at 0, 2, 6 weeks then 8 weekly thereafter. Children usually start at 5mg/kg. If control not achieved, a higher dose could be used else the interval reduced. Patients should get a CXR and Mantoux before starting in view of the particular risk of mycobacterial disease.
  • IV immunoglobulin has been used eg 2 doses on consecutive days monthly. Very expensive.
  • Mycophenolate – related to azathioprine. Used for connective tissue disease. SE gastrointestinal, liver, bone marrow. 600mg/m2 BD

Calcium and vitamin D supplements are often given for bone health.

Patients on immunosuppressants should avoid live vaccines and beware of infection. If unwell enough to need antibiotics they should probably stop treatment temporarily. Varicella is a particular concern – if contact with chickenpox and non-immune, consider VZIG or oral aciclovir for prophylaxis, and early IV aciclovir treatment. See Greenbook.

Not clear when to wean… Many patients do well for a year or so before their condition begins to worsen, swapping to another agent often works, and swapping back is also a useful option.

Outcome

JIA is a not a benign disease and outcome is variable. At least a third of patients have ongoing active disease into adulthood and many have sequelae eg:

  • joint damage requiring joint replacement
  • short stature from chronic disease compounded by steroid toxicity
  • localised growth problems (micrognathia or leg length inequality)
  • visual loss from uveitis
  • osteoporosis: one off DEXA scan not predictive of # (maybe better if serial scans?) so clinical. Minimize steroids; optimize exercise, nutrition, growth/puberty, calc/vitD/bisphosph

Bisphosphonates seem to be effective for increasing bone mass in JIA. Flu-like symptoms with first IV dose can be treated with paracetamol and tend not to recur.

Uveitis

The Uvea is the term for the whole eye (uvea=peeled grape). Whereas conjunctivitis looks like a red eye, it’s only really the surface that is inflamed. With uveitis, all the different tissues of the eye are inflamed. Acutely, might not look that different to conjunctivitis but painful, whereas latter usually just itchy. Anterior chamber starts to fill up with inflammatory cells so vision starts to deteriorate. An irregular pupil due to synechiae can eventually be seen, with hypopyon. Cataracts and scarring can follow.

Chronic on the other hand can be subclinical but potential for visual loss so screening important in associated conditions.

Usually idiopathic, otherwise:

  • Juvenile idiopathic arthritis – about 10% of patients with non-oligoarthritis, and 30% of ANA positive oligo so pretty common
  • HLA-B27 – with or without other B27 conditions such as Ankylosing spondylitis
  • Behcet’s disease (so do HLA B51)
  • Crohns disease and other IBD
  • Granulomatosis with polyangitis (ex-Wegeners)
  • Sarcoidosis (so do chitotriosidase)
  • Tubulointerstitial nephritis and uveitis (TINU) syndrome

Some infections can cause it:

Quinolones

eg ciprofloxacin.

Broad spectrum antibiotics.

Block DNA synthesis by bacteria (uniquely among antibiotics).

Good against gram negatives, including Salmonella, Shigella, Neisseria, Pseudomonas (one of the few oral antipseudomonals).

Good intracellular penetration so active against organisms such as Chlamydia, Mycoplasma, Legionella and some Mycobacteria.

Good tissue penetration including central nervous system. 80% of orally administered drug is bioavailable so the IV route is only used when absorption impaired.

But no anti-anaerobic activity, and not very good against common gram positives eg Pneumococcus, Enterococcus, Staphylococcus (in fact, use is associated with MRSA). The newer types (Gatifloxacin, Moxifloxacin, Levofloxacin) have better gram positive activity but would still not be your first line choice, and have less anti-pseudomonal activity.

Not licensed under 1yr.

Only contraindication is previous tendon problem caused by it!

Adverse Effects:

  • Disabling, long-lasting (even irreversible) musculoskeletal and neurological problems reported, v rarely. So only use for severe infections, unless no other antibiotic appropriate. And stop ASAP if symptoms (muscle pain, joint pain, weakness, neuropathy etc)
  • Seizures (+/- predisposing condition)
  • Tendonitis – rupture can occur within 48hrs of starting, but can also be months later! Steroids at same time may increase risk, as may renal impairment and solid organ transplants
  • Arthropathy in immature animals – so avoided in children (except Nalidixic acid) unless extenuating circumstances (only reversible musculoskeletal symptoms have been reported). Arthropathy occurs in CF anyway.
  • Can prolong QT
  • Photosensitivity
  • Valve regurgitation – so caution if preceding valve disease or other risk factor eg connective tissue disorder (Ehlers-Danlos, Marfans), hypertension (!), Turners (!)