Diagnostic criteria* |
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I. Demonstration of CPP crystals, obtained by biopsy, necropsy or aspirated synovial fluid, by definitive means. |
II. A. Identification of monoclinic or triclinic crystals showing a weakly positive, or a lack of birefringence by compensated polarized light microscopy. |
B. Presence of typical calcifications on radiographs. |
III. A. Acute arthritis, especially of knees or other large joints with or without concomitant hyperuricemia. |
B. Chronic arthritis, especially of knee, hip, wrist, carpus, elbow, shoulder, and metacarpophalangeal joints, particularly if accompanied by acute exacerbations; the chronic arthritis shows the following features helpful in differentiating it from osteoarthritis. |
1.Uncommon site for primary osteoarthritis. |
2.Radiographic appearance. |
3.Subchondral cyst formation. |
4.Severe progressive degeneration, with subchondral bony collapse (microfractures), and fragmentation, with formation of intraarticular radiodense bodies. |
5.Variable and inconstant osteophyte formation. |
6.Tendon calcifications, especially of Achilles, triceps and obturator tendons. |
7.Involvement of the axial skeleton with subchondral cysts of apophyseal and sacroiliac joints, multiple levels of disc calcification and vacuum phenomenon and sacroiliac vacuum phenomenon. |
Categories |
A. Definite – criteria I or II (A) and II (B) must be fulfilled |
B. Probable – criteria IIA or IIB must be fulfilled |
C. Possible – criteria IIIA or IIIB should alert the clinician to the possibility of underlying CPPD deposition |
Rosenthal AK, Ryan LM. In Arthritis and Allied Conditions. Koopman, WJ (Ed) (14th edition). Philadelphia: Williams and Wilkins pg. 2348–71, 2001.