overview of joint involvement

Last reviewed 01/2018

The clinical course of joint involvement is extremely variable:

  • may be a mild, self-limiting mono- or oligoarthitis
  • often an insidious symetrical polyarthritis
  • the most aggressive disease results in rapid disability with systemic inflammation and a high mortality rate

Often the disease begins in:

  • proximal finger joints
  • wrists

Later inflammation spreads to:

  • elbows
  • shoulders
  • knees
  • ankles
  • feet

Characteristic joint deformities include:

  • ulnar deviation of the fingers due to subluxation at the metacarpophalangeal joints
  • loss of finger function due to hyperextension of the PIP joints with fixed flexion of the DIP joints 'swan neck deformity'
  • fixed flexion of the PIP joints with hyperextension of the DIP joints 'boutonniere' or Z deformity of the thumb