The fuzzy nosology of early rheumatoid arthritis and early spondyloarthropathies: square classifications produced by circular reasoning? - 01/01/01
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Résumé |
Although rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and spondyloarthropathy (SP) are useful concepts in practice, it remains unclear whether they are diseases. Most experts believe they are syndromes. RA and SP may stem from a common root of undifferentiated inflammatory joint disease, perhaps related to an at least transient impairment in exogenous antigen clearance followed by an inappropriate immune response to persistence of the excess antigens. Whether the undifferentiated joint disease evolves into RA or into SP may depend on a number of patient-related factors, most notably genes, of which some may be common to RA and SP. Differences in the number of these factors may explain the considerable variations in disease severity across patients subjected to similar triggering insults. Mountains intertwined at their base may be an apt illustration of this hypothesis of a role for multiple and partly shared pathogenic factors in chronic inflammatory joint diseases. Binary classifications of early arthritis into early RA or early SP are often arbitrary and/or based on circular reasoning. The same is true of the cutoffs considered suggestive of these diagnoses'. The controversy in recent publications on this issue and the limited efficacy of existing criteria in diagnosing early RA and SP bear witness to these shortcomings.
Mots clés : criteria ; diagnosis ; early arthritis ; nosology ; rheumatoid arthritis ; spondyloarthropathy.
Plan
Vol 68 - N° 4
P. 285-289 - juin 2001 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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