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Home > Ankylosing spondylitis


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Ankylosing spondylitis (AS) is a chronic, progressive inflammatory arthritis primarily affecting spine and sacroiliac joints, causing eventual fusion of the spine. Complete fusion results in a complete rigidity of the spine, a condition known as bamboo spine.

AS is characterised as a spondyloarthropathy (SpA).

1 Signs and symptoms

The typical patient is a young man of 15-30 years old (although women are also affected) with pain and stiffness in the spine. It is also associated with iridocyclitis (anterior uveitis), ulcerative colitis, psoriasis and Reiter's disease, through HLA-B27 (see below).

Organs affected by AS, other than the axial spine, are the hips, heart, heels, and other areas (peripheral).

2 Diagnosis

The diagnosis is by X-ray studies of the spine, which show characteristic spinal changes and sacroiliitis . A normal X-ray does not exclude the disease.

HLA-B27 is occasionally used, but does not distinguish AS from other diseases and is therefore not of real diagnostic value.

3 Epidemiology

In the USA, the prevalence is 0.25%, but as it is a chronic condition, the number of new cases ( incidenceIn optics one considers angles of incidence. Incidence algebras are associative algebras used in combinatorics, a branch of mathematics. See also incidence structure. Some axioms of synthetic geometry deal with a relation called incidence see incidence (g) is fairly low.

The sex ratio is 3:1 for men:women.

4 Therapy

Physical therapy and exercise, along with medication, are at the heart of therapy for ankylosating spondylitis.

Medications used are:

5 Prognosis

AS can range from mild to progressively debilitating, and from medically controlled to refractive.

6 Pathophysiology

AS is a systemic rheumatic disease, and about 90% of the patients are HLA-B27 positive. HLA-DR and IL1ra are also implicated in Ankylosing Spondylitis.

7 See also


8 External links

Rheumatology Diseases

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