Background
Signs/Symptoms
Labs/Diagnosis
Acute treatment
Chronic Treatment
100

What is gout?

A form of arthritis characterized by severe pain, redness, and tenderness in joints.

100

What are common symptoms of gout?

Red, hot, extremely painful and swollen joints.

Can also see fever.

100

Serum urate level > __ mg/dL is considered hyperuricemia. 

6.8 (7 is acceptable)

100

What non-pharm treatment can be considered? 

Ice.

Educate patients to reduce alcohol consumption, reduce high purine diets, hydrate more, lose weight, smoking cessation, evaluate potential drugs, etc.

100

First-line ULT for all patients? 

Allopurinol (Zyloprim)

Start low and titrate up.

2nd line is Febuxostat (Uloric)

Alternative: Probenecid, pegloticase

200

The term for elevated serum urate concentration?

Hyperuricemia.

200

What part of the body is most commonly associated with gout?

Big toe (hallux).

200

Uric acid level goal?

<6 mg/dL


200

What are the first-line options for acute gout flare?

NSAIDS, Coricosteroids, and Colchicine. 

Indomethacin, ibuprofen, and naproxen are commonly used NSAIDS for acute goat flares.

Combo therpay may be considered if multiple joints are affected or pain is severe.

200

True or False. Patients who present to their provider with an acute gout flare need to wait until it resolves to start ULT.

False. ULT may be started during an acute gout flare. 

Usually continued indefinitely. 

300

What is most common in patients? Overproduction or Underexcretion of uric acid. 

Underexcretion of uric acid is most common in patients ~80%.

300

Chunks of uric acid (monosodium urate) crystals that accumulate in and around joints and other parts of the body as the result of advanced gout is called what?

Tophus/i.

300
True or False. Gout is diagnosed by symptoms and not by serum uric acid levels. 

True. 

300

Is low dose or high dose colchicine preferred and why?

Low dose due to similar efficacy and dose-dependent ADR (GI, neutropenia, myopathy).

Should be used within 24 hours.

300

Indication for starting ULT? 

-1 or more tophi

-Radiographic damage due to gout

-Frequent gout flares (>/= 2 flares/yr)

400

Name 2 risk factors of developing gout.

Increasing age, male gender, genetic predisposition, high purine diet, or obesity.

400

Name at least 2 other parts of the body that can be affected by gout.

Ankle, knee, elbow, wrist, hands, or fingers.

400

What is required for a definitive diagnosis of gout? 

It requires aspiration of synovial fluid from affected joint and identification of intracellular monosodium urate crystals.

400

What options are available for NPO patients?

IV, IM, intra-articular corticosteroids is recommended. 

400

Which ULT has a BBW and what is it?

Febuxostat (Uloric).

Increased risk of heart-related death and death from all causes with Uloric.

500

Uric acid is the end product of ____ degradation.

Purine.

500

What organ can be affected by gout and what can happen?

Kidneys.


Renal impairment as well as kidney stones. 

500

The name of the classification criteria for gout and what score classifies gout?

2015 ACR/EULAR gout classification criteria.

A score of >/= 8 you can classify as gout.

(max score is 23)

American College of Rheumatology (ACR)

European League Against Rheumatism (EULAR)

500

True or False. Patient on established ULT should stop their therapy during an acute gout flare. 

False. Patient should continue on therapy. 

500

What should be tested prior to starting allopurinol and for which patient population?

HLA-B*5801 due to risk of AHS.

Among  Southeast Asian descent (e.g., Han Chinese, Korean, Thai) and for African American patients.

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