Thirty-nine patients with rheumatoid arthritis who had presented with tarsitis before, were investigated at the level of the rearfoot. The first 17 patients had CT with previous tenography when it was possible; the following 22 patients had MRI with gadolinium injection. Tendon involvement appeared in 52.9% of the cases on CT, and in 90% of the feet on MRI; therefore, in case of clinical or radiological signs of tarsitis, it appears that tendon involvement must be suspected. With the two procedures the tibialis posterior tendon lesions were very predominant. In the majority of the patients (31/39), there was associated involvement of two or more tendons. If there is a ruptured tendon, the authors think that one must be cautious with surgical tendinous transfer; indeed, the long-term results of this surgical procedure present a strong probability of being compromised in rheumatoid arthritis which is a progressive disease.
We evaluated histologically samples of synovial tissue from the knees of 50 patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). The samples were taken during revision for aseptic loosening. The findings were compared with those in 64 knees with osteoarthritis (OA) and aseptic loosening and in 18 knees with RA without loosening. The last group had been revised because of failure of the inlay or the coupling system of a constrained prosthesis. All the patients had had a total ventral synovectomy before implantation of the primary prosthesis. In all three groups a foreign-body reaction and lymphocellular infiltration were seen in more than 80% of the tissue samples. Deposits of fibrin were observed in about one-third to one-half of the knees in all groups. Typical signs of the reactivation of RA such as rheumatoid necrosis and/or proliferation of synovial stromal cells were found in 26% of knees with RA and loosening, but not in those with OA and loosening and in those with RA without loosening. Our findings show that reactivation of rheumatoid synovitis occurs after total knee replacement and may be a cofactor in aseptic loosening in patients with RA.
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