- Terminology Chondrocalcinosis – calcification of hyaline (articular) cartilage or fibrocartilage (menisci) or ligaments
- Usually but not always due to calcium pyrophosphate
- May also be seen with oxalosis
- Pseudogout is an older clinical term referring to acute pain (similar to gout) but without response to the usual treatment for gout
- CPPD – Deposition of crystals in the joint with or without chondrocalcinosis
- Most common crystalline arthropathy
- Usually but not always due to calcium pyrophosphate
Prevalence
- Widespread in older population
- M:F = 3:2
- Clinical
- Intermittent attacks
- May be mono-articular or polyarticular (more often)
- Pain
- Redness
- Swelling
- May be mono-articular or polyarticular (more often)
- Intermittent attacks
- Types
- Frequently occurs in association with osteoarthritis
- Aging process with no known etiology
- In association with metabolic diseases
- Hyperparathyroidism
- Hemochromatosis
- Hypothyroidism
- Hypomagnesemia
- Hypophosphatasia
- Ochronosis
- Calcium pyrophosphate crystals may be recovered from synovial fluid (most often) or within leukocytes
- Characteristic weakly positive birefringent diffraction pattern
- Location
- Knee
- Especially meniscus
- Cartilage of patellofemoral joint
- Wrist
- Triangular fibrocartilage in distal radioulnar joint bilaterally
- Pelvis
- Sacroiliac joint
- Symphysis
- Spine
- Annulus fibrosis of lumbar intervertebral disk
- Never in nucleus pulposus as in ochronosis
- Annulus fibrosis of lumbar intervertebral disk
- Shoulder
- Glenoid
- Hip
- Labrum
- Elbow
- Ankle
- Acromioclavicular joint
- Knee
- Imaging Findings
- Pyrophosphate arthropathy resembles osteoarthritis
- Joint space narrowing
- Extensive subchondral sclerosis
- Polyarticular chondrocalcinosis (in fibro- and hyaline cartilage)
- In knee, disproportionate narrowing of patellofemoral joint
- Large subchondral cysts are a hallmark
- Numerous intra-articular bodies
- Fragmentation of subchondral bone
- In hand, beak-like projections from 2nd, 3rd metacarpal heads
- Subchondral cysts (esp. carpal bones)
- Unusual distribution of disease (radiocarpal/ulnar joint, patellofemoral joint)
- SLAC – scapholunate advanced collapse
- Caused by laxness of the ligaments and malpositioning of the scaphoid and lunate
- May develop in 25% with CPPD but also occurs for other reasons
- Radio-scaphoid, but not radio-lunate, joint is narrowed
- Usually have a deep concave scaphoid fossa in distal radius in CPPD as opposed to SLAC from trauma
- Pyrophosphate arthropathy resembles osteoarthritis
Source: http://www.learningradiology.com/archives2012/COW%20517-CPPD%20arthropathy/cppdcorrect.html
Connie Dello Buono
Connie Dello Buono ; motherhealth@gmail.com
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