<aside>
Enteropathic arthritis is a type of seronegative spondyloarthritis associated with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), primarily Crohn’s disease and Ulcerative colitis, and occasionally other gastrointestinal conditions (celiac disease, Whipple’s disease, intestinal bypass).
</aside>
It shares features with other SpA (HLA-B27 association, sacroiliitis, enthesitis) but has a close temporal relation to bowel inflammation.
Epidemiology
- Seen in 10–20% of patients with IBD.
- Occurs in both Crohn’s disease and UC, slightly more with Crohn’s.
- Male predominance in axial disease; peripheral arthritis equally affects both sexes.
Pathogenesis
- Genetic: HLA-B27 strongly linked (esp. axial form).
- Immune: Cross-reactivity between gut bacterial antigens and joint antigens.
- Inflammatory cascade: Gut inflammation → cytokine release (TNF-α, IL-23/IL-17 axis) → synovial inflammation and enthesitis.
Clinical Features
Clinical subtypes:
- Axial Arthritis (like ankylosing spondylitis)
- Sacroiliitis, spondylitis.
- Usually independent of IBD activity.
- Chronic, progressive.
- Presents with inflammatory back pain, morning stiffness, reduced spinal mobility.
- Peripheral Arthritis: Asymmetric oligoarthritis (large joints, lower limbs).
- Type 1: Pauciarticular, acute, self-limited, flares with IBD activity.
- Type 2: Polyarticular, chronic, not always linked with bowel activity.
Enthesitis & Dactylitis
- Heel pain (Achilles tendon, plantar fascia).
- Sausage digits.