Folate supplementation can reduce the incidence of hepatotoxicity and gastrointestinal side-effects of MTX in patients with RA. It can also reduce patient withdrawal from MTX treatment. Although it tended to reduce mouth sores, it had no statistical significance. No significant difference was found between high-dose folate and low-dose folate on MTX efficacy or toxicity.
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and Candidal prosthetic joint infections (PJIs) are very rare, and the optimal management for these patients is still unknown. A 54-year-old man with traumatic arthritis due to previous electric injury successfully retained the implant despite the successive infection with MRSA and Candida albicans after total knee arthroplasty (TKA). Continuous lavage with vancomycin was used to control MRSA infection and repeated local washout plus oral swallow with voriconazole tablet were administered to eradicate C. albicans. Additional three reported cases were identified by the criteria of selecting patients with concomitant and/or successive MRSA and Candidal PJIs. Different methods were applied with variable outcomes. Therefore, several risk factors such as intra-articular corticosteroid injection, high frequency of door openings in the operating room, excessive blood loss and allogeneic red blood cell transfusions should be avoided. Debridement, antibiotics and implant retention (DAIR) can be an alternative in dedicated patients to control acute MRSA and Candidal PJIs. Particularly, repeated intra-articular washout with susceptible drugs and a prolonged duration of oral antibiotics was essential for microbial control.
Ratioinale:Relapsing polychondritis (RP) is a rare and heterogeneous disease complex of unknown origin which basically affects cartilaginous structures, 40% of which accompanied by rheumatic, hematologic, and endocrine disease. Among them, vasculitis is the most common accompanying type and usually presented with positive antineutrophilic cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA). The presence of ANCA could be primary or drug-induced like propylthiouracil (PTU). Central involvement of RP is very rare, and there is almost no report of cerebral vasculopathy manifested as moyamoya.Patient concerns:A 26-year-old woman complained about recurrent fever, auricular chondritis, ocular inflammation, and arthritis. She had an 8-year drug intake of PTU for Graves disease. Myeloperoxidase antineutrophilc cytoplasmic antibodies (MPO-ANCA) were found positive. Magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) detected multiple intracranial vasculopathy which we highly suspected it as moyamoya disease.Diagnoses:Relapsing polychondritis, Graves disease and suspected moyamoya disease were clinically diagnosed.Interventions and outcomes:In case of possible PTU-induced vasculitis and the aggravation of vasculopathy, PTU was replaced by Iodine-131 (I131) therapy. Induction treatment included oral prednisone 30 mg daily and oral cyclophosphamide 100 mg daily. Symptoms rapidly relieved before discharge. Inflammation markers were normal and MPO-ANCA decreased in 3 weeks after admission. Prednisone was gradually tapered to 7.5 mg daily and at month 10 azathioprine was continued for maintenance.Lessons:RP can overlap with Graves disease and moyamoya disease; comprehensive tests should be performed when admission. When relapsing polychondritis is accompanied with Graves disease, especially when ANCA is positive, PTU should be avoided.
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