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Musculoskeletal sarcoidosis

Last reviewed dd mmm yyyy. Last edited dd mmm yyyy

Authoring team

Musculoskeletal features are reported between 4% and 38% of cases. Patients may have arthritis, periarthritis, bone disease, myositis and vaculitis (1)

Arthritis

  • 25% of patients with sarcoidosis may present with arthritis or complain of arthritis with other disease features
  • can either be acute or chronic arthritis
    • acute arthritis
      • typically presents as bilateral diffuse ankle swelling with or without erythema nodosum (Löfgren syndrome; more common) or as an oligoarthritis of a reactive type
      • usually the involvement is oligoarticular with both large and small joint involvement mainly in lower than the upper limb
    • chronic arthritis - the following forms (usually affecting the hands, wrists, ankles, feet and knees) of chronic arthropathy is seen in sarcoidosis patients
      • dactilytis
      • oligo or polyarthritis
      • tenosynoviti

Myopathy

  • muscle involvement is seen in 50 - 80% of sarcoidosis patients
    • in a study carried out using gastrocnemius muscle biopsy on 122 patients revealed that 65 (53%) had a positive result
  • but in a small number of people (5%) muscle involvement is asymptomatic
  • myositis may be focal or can be widespread with generalized weakness and myalgia

Bone disease

  • relatively infrequent, seen in around 5% of patients with sarcoidosis
  • the condition is asymptomatic in half of the affected individuals
  • typical cystic or lattice like radiographic appearance can be seen
  • may be associated with dactilytis and pseudoclubbing (due to gross nail and nailbed dystrophy)

Vasculitis

  • rare, but involvement of large, medium and small vessels have been described.

Reference:


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