Juvenile psoriatic arthritis
A diagnosis of psoriatic arthritis is made in the presence of arthritis together with either a psoriatic rash or two of the following: dactylitis; nail pitting or onycholysis; psoriasis in a first-degree relative
- diagnosis may be challenging since skin manifestations appear few years later after articular involvement
In patients with juvenile psoriatic arthritis (1,2,3):
- incidence peaks at 2 to 4 years of age and then again after the age of 10 years
- articular involvement may vary e.g - from symmetrical small-joint arthritis to asymmetrical lower-extremity large-joint arthritis and finally may progress to polyarthritis mimicking seropositive rheumatoid arthritis.
- dactylitis (“sausage-like” fingers) is caused by arthritis of metacarpophalangeal, proximal interphalangeal and distal interphalangeal joints of one or more fingers
- features of enthesitis related arthritis may be present e.g. - enthesitis, sacroiliitis, spondylitis etc
- psoriatic plaques are usually present on the extensor sides of joints, haired skin, the umbilicus and the perineum
- nail changes are common e.g. - nail dystrophy, subungual hyperkeratosis and onycholysis
- psoriasis occurs in half of affected children but may not develop until later in the disease course (3)
- HLA-B27 is present in 10 to 12% of patients (3)
Reference:
- (1) Barut K, Adrovic A, Şahin S, Kasapçopur Ö. Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis. Balkan Medical Journal. 2017;34(2):90-101.
- (2) Makay B, Unsal E, KasapcopurO. Juvenile idiopathic arthritis. World J Rheumatol. 2013; 3(3): 16-24
- (3) Sandborg CI et al. Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis. NEJM 2025;393:162-174
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