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tophus

Etiology: 1) may occur in gout 2) may refer to sialolithiasis Pathology: - avascular deposit of uric acid in periarticular fibrous tissue, cartilage of the external ear or kidney - chalky white masses of uric acid, surrounded by inflammatory cells & fibrous tissue. Clinical manifestations: - painless, persistent, generally noninflammatory nodules - many be palpable on physical examination - may occur within joints or non-palpable tissues - located around joints & in soft tissues - predilection for the extensor surfaces of the - elbows - distal Achilles tendon - fingers (proximal interphalangeal joints & distal interphalangeal joints) - cartilaginous portions of the ears. - acute gouty flares may occur at sites of tophi Radiology: - X-ray of affected joint(s) - tophi appear as hyperdense soft tissue swellings - calcifications may appear within tophi - ultrasound is the most sensitive method to detect tophi Complications: - tophi are deforming, can interfere with function, & directly erode bone - ulceration of overlying skin can occur - infection can be difficult to treat because tophi are avascular Differential diagnosis: - arthritis mutilans Management: - see gout

Related

sialolithiasis (salivary stone)

General

gout abnormal morphologic structure (malformation)

References

  1. Medical Knowledge Self Assessment Program (MKSAP) 15, American College of Physicians, Philadelphia 2009 - Medical Knowledge Self Assessment Program (MKSAP) 20 American College of Physicians, Philadelphia 2025