Cases reported "Arthritis, Gouty"

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1/7. Acute paraplegia in a patient with spinal tophi: a case report.

    A 28-year-old man with a 5-year history of gouty arthritis suffered from an acute episode of lower back pain. He visited a rehabilitative clinic and received physical therapy following his examination. Weakness and numbness of both lower legs developed rapidly after physical therapy. He was sent to our hospital with complete paralysis of both lower limbs and complete sensory loss below the umbilicus 3 hours after the physical therapy. No peripheral tophi were found. myelography showed an extrinsic compression of the dura sac at T10. Emergency decompressive laminectomy of T9 to T11 was performed. During the surgery, caseous material was found deposited in the ligamentum flavum and the left T9 to T10 facet joint, with indentation of the dura sac. The pathologic diagnosis was spinal tophi. After surgery, the patient's neurologic function recovered rapidly. It was suspected that inappropriate physical therapy might have aggravated acute inflammation of spinal gout and resulted in a rapid deterioration of neurologic function. Though gout is a chronic medical disease, an acute attack of spinal gout may be disastrous and requires emergency neurosurgical intervention.
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ranking = 1
keywords = back pain, back
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2/7. Inflammatory pseudotumor of the liver complicated with recurrent gouty arthritis.

    Inflammatory pseudotumor (IPT) of the liver is a rare benign lesion of unknown etiology and is often accompanied by fever. Unexplained persistent fever unresponsive to antibiotics developed in a 70-year-old man suffering from intractable recurrent gouty arthritis. 67Ga-scintigraphy disclosed intense focal uptake in the upper abdomen. The lesion in the left lobe of the liver was an ill-defined hypodensity mass on computed tomographic scan and was enhanced on dynamic magnetic resonance imaging. The tumor was surgically removed and a diagnosis of IPT was made. fever and arthritis resolved completely after surgery. Possible interaction between IPT of the liver and gouty arthritis was suggested.
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ranking = 0.012815748215366
keywords = upper
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3/7. Intestinal pseudotumorous gouty nodulosis: a colonic tophus without manifestation of gouty arthritis.

    A 37-year-old black woman with nephritis secondary to systemic lupus erythematosus, steroid-induced diabetes mellitus, and hypertension presented with fever, nausea, vomiting, and right upper quadrant abdominal pain with distension. Abdominal computed tomography (CT) scan revealed a colonic mass, and CT- guided fine-needle aspiration demonstrated birefringent crystalline material. After several weeks of antibiotic therapy, the patient underwent laparoscopic examination followed by extended right hemicolectomy for a large mass in the subserosa of the transverse colon. Pathological examination of this mass revealed it to be a gouty tophus. To our knowledge, no case of tophaceous gout presenting as an intestinal mass has previously been reported.
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ranking = 0.012815748215366
keywords = upper
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4/7. Peripheral arthrocentesis in the work-up of acute low back pain.

    Involvement of the axial skeleton in acute gouty arthritis has rarely been reported. Without the presence of peripheral tophi or history of gout, this diagnosis is often not considered. A patient is described with acute low back pain and for whom a diagnosis of acute axial gout was suggested after arthrocentesis of an asymptomatic peripheral joint yielded monosodium urate crystals. Treatment with colchicine led to prompt resolution of the gouty flare. Demonstration of urate crystals in this manner may encourage the clinician to attempt a trial therapy for acute gout, or at least to add gout to the differential diagnosis of acute back pain.
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ranking = 6
keywords = back pain, back
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5/7. Recurrent spinal stenosis caused by tophaceous gout: a case report and review of literature.

    A 57-year-old man with severe gouty arthritis for over 20 years was admitted because of persistent back and leg pain and neurogenic claudication. Lumbar spinal stenosis from the L4 to L5 level was diagnosed after admission and decompressive laminectomy was done. However, about 10 months later, another surgery with laminectomy of L2 and L3 and postero-lateral fusion was performed due to post-laminectomy instability with recurrence of stenosis. The pathology of the resected ligmentum flava had tophi deposition. At the one-year follow-up examination after the second operation, the patient was pain free and had resumed daily activity.
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ranking = 0.055817549883183
keywords = back
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6/7. Extradural spinal tophaceous gout: evolution with medical treatment.

    A patient with chronic tophaceous gouty arthritis developed paraparesis due to medullar compression from a urate sodium tophus. We report the MRI features of this tophaceous gout, which showed an extradural hyperintense signal with an isointense nodule signal on T1 weighted sequences. Surgical removal of the epidural lesion resulted in complete clinical recovery. At the upper level of the spine, an extension of the epidural lesion was not removed, but after one year of medical treatment of the gout, MRI showed regression of the epidural compression.
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ranking = 0.012815748215366
keywords = upper
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7/7. Gouty arthropathy of the lumbar spine: a case report and review of the literature.

    STUDY DESIGN: A patient with hyperuricemia developed symptoms from lateral recess stenosis attributed to gouty arthropathy of a lumbar facet joint. OBJECTIVE: To present the diagnosis and management of gouty arthropathy of the lumbar spine in one individual. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: The symptoms and treatment of a patient with intra-articular gout of a lumbar facet are presented and contrasted with other cases of spinal extra-articular gout found in the literature. methods: A patient with hyperuricemia reported back pain and symptoms consistent with lateral recess stenosis. Conservative treatment failed, and, after further evaluation, a successful decompressive laminectomy was performed. pathology revealed intra-articular urate crystal deposition. RESULTS: This patient's unilateral S1 radiculopathy corresponded with magnetic resonance and computed tomography studies documenting unilateral lateral L5-S1 lateral recess stenosis secondary to intra-articular gouty arthropathy. As anticipated, the serum uric acid also was elevated. Since surgical decompression with unilateral laminotomy was performed, the patient has been symptom-free for 2 years. CONCLUSION: Although rare, gouty arthropathy of the lumbar facet joint should be considered in all patients with neurologic symptoms and known or suspected gout. Optimization of pharmacologic treatment is indicated for patients suspected of having gouty neuropathy. Surgical decompression is indicated if conservative management with Indocin, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agents, and allopurinol fails to reverse neurologic dysfunction.
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ranking = 1
keywords = back pain, back
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