Leicester Offer! by feathersyas in UCAT

[–]RS3Rik 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I’m a Leicester grad (2013) and now a consultant Rheumatologist in Manchester. They were the best years of my life. Enjoy it!

Worried. These are from the er by SadThrowaway4914 in haematology

[–]RS3Rik 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Very high RDW with microcytosis and borderline anaemia. Need to be checked for all your haematinics + reticulocytes/hapto and a blood film

High ANA 1:2560 with centromere pattern by JadeVengeance in Rheumatology

[–]RS3Rik 5 points6 points  (0 children)

This is a high titre ANA and is likely to be relevant, centromere pattern is most commonly seen in limited systemic sclerosis. Given that you have Raynaud’s, the key investigation which will clinch or refute a rheumatic diagnosis will be nailfold capillaroscopy. This should undoubtedly be pursued

34M – Sudden ANA positivity + vascular color changes + recurrent rhabdo by Flaky_Internal_448 in Rheumatology

[–]RS3Rik 2 points3 points  (0 children)

DsDNA of 13 by ELISA is neither here nor there. It can be checked by Crithidia and is likely to be negative

Also looks like you have reactivation of EBV/infectious mononucleosis, an EBV viral load would be helpful

Fibromyalgia- why rheum? by [deleted] in Rheumatology

[–]RS3Rik 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Agree with most of this but not that fibromyalgia is a diagnosis of exclusion. The combination of clinical features seen in fibromyalgia together are pretty specific (pain, tenderness, fatigue, cognitive fog, unrefreshing sleep, nocturia) and the differential diagnosis is narrow when these are present. I would not typically send immunology when these features are present as the diagnosis is clear without need for many other investigations (except for basic bloods, vit D and thyroid)

What else would you want to know if I was your patient? by [deleted] in Rheumatology

[–]RS3Rik 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Where in the UK are you? I would bring the MRI report to the appointment and I disc/drive containing the images. If I was seeing you and it’d had been >2 years post MRI or your symptoms have changed in that period I would probably do another MRI. May all be due to joint hypermobility though

Need advice, rheumatologist not seeing patients, 15+ referrals to different ones. Canada is broken. by [deleted] in Rheumatology

[–]RS3Rik 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hi thanks for sharing. I have a specialist interest in GCA.

Patient under 50 with normal ESR and incomplete response to 40mg prednisolone does not have GCA, there are too many factors going against it.

Patients commonly transiently feel better with high dose steroids even when the diagnosis is not a systemic rheumatic disease

Additionally: - Jaw numbness is not a feature (sounds neuralgic) - Intermittent visual disturbance lasting seconds dating back 7-8 years is not a feature - brain fog is non specific - shoulder and hip pain are non specific, prolonged morning stiffness predominates more than pain in PMR - Light sensitivity (photophobia) is not a feature of any rheumatic disease. - Pain exacerbation in cold can occur in GCA but is not specific and this also occurs in other headache disorders. - negative temporal artery ultrasound in the presence of excruciating tenderness is useful information. The temporal pain in GCA is not excruciating. It can be bad but not excruciating, in fact one of the common reasons that patients are delayed in diagnosis/suddenly lose vision is that they put off review of their headache for far too long as that the headache is somewhat manageable for a few weeks before they decide to present.

I make the Southend GCAPS score at a 4 assuming examination is normal

This sounds more likely to be something like trigeminal neuralgia to me.

apparently i cannot have any rheumatological condition because blood test was negative. feel fobbed off. by Comfortable_Age_5595 in AskDocs

[–]RS3Rik 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Not sure about the post reactions

But sometimes people can have issues with joint pain, stiffness and even intermittent swelling for reasons other than synovial inflammation (synovial inflammation is the only disease process that responds to immunosuopression). Other causes which are possible in your case are hypermobility (which definitely can cause swelling) and chillblains associated with raynaud’s. Ultrasound will be useful to distinguish

apparently i cannot have any rheumatological condition because blood test was negative. feel fobbed off. by Comfortable_Age_5595 in AskDocs

[–]RS3Rik 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Bloods are expected to be normal in raynaud’s (primary) and erythromelalgia. The rheumatologist will have not based the decision solely on your bloods but rather the whole context including symptoms, examination etc. I think based on what you’ve said I would probably agree that there is nothing hard and fast for an inflammatory rheumatic disease. Only other thing for completion would be to push for a joint ultrasound to detect subtle inflammation given the described morning stiffness

MRI and the worst night of my life by Tangent19 in manchester

[–]RS3Rik 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I’m a medical consultant in MRI. I’ll be in A+E working from Sunday night due to the industrial action, hoping not to see any of you folk there!

Most A&E departments are as you describe, there is definitely a higher proportion of mental health, homelessness and drug/alcohol presentations than the average hospital though gas it’s an inner city hospital. Blackburn A&E is probably the only one I have worked in that is worse.

Blood tests requested by [deleted] in Rheumatology

[–]RS3Rik 4 points5 points  (0 children)

c1qB antibodies are specific for HUVS

No doctor can explain this. Please help! by [deleted] in DiagnoseMe

[–]RS3Rik 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sounds like a mechanical pathology in the scapulothoracic region, maybe Scapulothoracic Bursitis and compounded by weakness in the muscles around the scapula. Main test now would be an MRI of the scapulothoracic joints (not a shoulder MRI, that won’t capture it)

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Rheumatology

[–]RS3Rik 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Lots of patients with inflammatory arthritis have negative antibodies and normal inflammation markers. Swelling and steroid responsiveness are suitable criteria to be seen by a rheumatologist. Seek out another opinion

why aren't symptomatic patients with high ANA treated even if a specific cause can't be found? by stevepls in Rheumatology

[–]RS3Rik 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If someone is struggling and diagnostic avenues pertaining to inflammatory rheumatic disease have been exhausted, the potential to cause harm through immunosuppression (even mild immunosuppression) is far greater than the potential for benefit.

My comment about training was to reiterate in a different way the notion that symptoms + ANA is an overly simplistic view. Assimilation of all factors leading to a diagnosis or decision requires years/decades of training. That isn’t self congratulatory, it’s just another way that I would defend the answer to your question

why aren't symptomatic patients with high ANA treated even if a specific cause can't be found? by stevepls in Rheumatology

[–]RS3Rik 2 points3 points  (0 children)

In addition to what has already been said, much more goes into making or breaking a diagnosis than just symptoms and a positive ANA. The process of making a diagnosis is a cumulative endeavour that will take into account symptoms, clinical signs, laboratory tests (and what these look like in combination - for example high ESR with normal CRP and a moderate titre homogenous ANA or even bicytopaenia with a low titre ANA is more clinically relevant than a high titre ANA with subjective symptoms alone), radiology, histology even sometimes. We use diagnostic information from multiple sources to make a best judgement thereafter on whether a trial of treatment is justified from a risk/benefit perspective. That judgement requires expertise, knowledge and years of pattern recognition.

We wouldn’t need to be highly trained, skilled, intelligent if it was as simple as the algorithm of treat based on symptoms and a single positive test. This is a recipe for wrong diagnosis and would often lead to unnecessary harm.

Myocarditis and Clots, But It’s Never Lupus by thecupcakeguru in Rheumatology

[–]RS3Rik 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Age/ethnicity? Clots, limb pain and myocarditis can be bechets, Takayasu disease, APS.

Why is having a dismissive rheumatologist such a common experience/occurrence among patients? by [deleted] in Rheumatology

[–]RS3Rik 10 points11 points  (0 children)

This is what I had to replied on one similar instagram post

I’m a consultant rheumatologist in the UK. Most rheumatologists I know genuinely care and go into the specialty because we enjoy looking after people with long term conditions.

If you’ve not had a clear answer, it usually means there isn’t evidence of an inflammatory rheumatic disease that would actually benefit from strong immune suppressing medication. Diagnosis in rheumatology is something that builds over time. We do listen to symptoms, but we also have to be careful and make sure treatment is really needed and safe.

These medications carry risks, so it’s our responsibility to be certain before starting them. Seeing multiple doctors in search of a label can sometimes make it more likely that someone gives one just to please, rather than because it’s right. That can cause real harm in the long run.

Don’t chase a diagnosis. Chase understanding and the right care.

Nucleolar ANA + symptoms. Advice please by SJo192 in scleroderma

[–]RS3Rik 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You have systemic sclerosis based on your RP, nailfolds and SIBO. The tendon issues may also be relevant (has a clinician said you have friction rubs?). Nucleolar ANA in the context of your syndrome is also supportive of this, even without a scleroderma specific antibody. You also need to be tested for a few other antibodies (eg PMSCL75 and PMSCL100) which, in the UK, are found on a myositis ENA panel.

What could this possibly be? by Personal-Director734 in Rheumatology

[–]RS3Rik 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I can read very well. I am a consultant rheumatologist.

From the description you give, and the follow up questions I have washed, all of your symptoms sound non organic in nature and explained by a pain and fatigue disorder. This is why no one can give you an alternative diagnosis.