OSCE CASE
Amanda Manzione
HPI: 59 yo M c/o R knee pain x 4 days
History Elements:
- Pain 7/10 severity, has been worsening since onset
- Difficulty ambulating since the pain began
- Pain worse with activity
- Denies any mechanism of injury or trauma
- Had an experience like this before 1 year ago on the same knee, 6 months ago on the L knee
- Pain does not radiate but sometimes he feels similar pain in his big toe
- OTC NSAIDs have not relieved the pain
- Was camping 1 week ago in the woods on Long Island
- Denies fever, n/v/d/c, headache, flu-like symptoms.
PE:
- Vitals: Temp 98F, HR 67 bpm, RR 16 breaths/min, BP 136/80, O2 sat 98%
- Ht 5’5”, Wt 250 lbs, BMI 41.1 (obese)
- Gen: NAD
- Lungs CTAB
- Heart normal S1/S2 no murmur
- R knee erythematous and edematous on inspection, L knee WNL
- R knee warm and firm to palpation, L knee WNL
- R knee ROM limited secondary to pain, L knee WNL
- R great toe also erythematous and swollen at MTP, otherwise R foot and L foot WNL
DDx
- Gout
- Osteoarthritis
- Septic Arthritis
- Trauma
- Cellulitis
- Lyme disease/other insect bite/hypersensitivity skin reaction
Labs:
- Joint aspirate R Knee: negative birefringent monosodium urate crystals
- CBC shows increased neutrophils
- ESR and CRP elevated
- Urate levels elevated
- Imaging with no specific finds
Treatment:
- Prednisone 30 mg first dose, taper down x 10 days for acute flare
- Allopurinol 300 mg daily for preventative maintenance
- NSAIDs for pain, rest
Patient Counseling:
- Take the steroid, Prednisone, for the next 10 days to reduce the inflammation and pain in the R knee and big toe. After this flare has subsided, begin the other medication, Allopurinol, which will help prevent further flares from occurring.
- Losing weight will be a big part of preventing gout flares and promote your overall health and well-being. Avoiding sugary drinks and alcohol can help achieve this goal