Gout - Diagnosis
Rheumatoid Arthritis. Rheumatoid arthritis can cause distortion in the joints of the fingers, inflammation, and pain that may mimic gout. It is particularly difficult to distinguish chronic gout in older people from rheumatoid arthritis. A proper diagnosis can be made with a detailed medical history, laboratory tests, and identification of MSU crystals. Osteoarthritis. Gout can coincide and be confused with osteoarthritis in older people, particularly when it occurs in arthritic finger joints in women. In general, gout should be suspected if the joints in the fingertips are unusually enlarged.  |
Click the icon to see an image of osteoarthritis. |
Infections. Joint infections can have features that resemble gout and a correct diagnosis is critical for appropriate treatment. For example, some cases of gout have been confused with infection after joint replacement. On the other hand, joint infection not associated with surgery might indicate sepsis, which is a widespread and potentially life-threatening bacterial infection that can cause inflamed joints, chills, and spiking fever. The severity of the fever and a high white-blood cell count in the joint fluid helps diagnose a septic infection, while identifying urate crystals in the joint is a good indicator of gout. Charcot Foot. Between 1 - 2.5% of people with diabetes suffer from Charcot foot or Charcot joint (medically referred to as neuropathic arthropathy). This condition is caused by abnormalities in the nerves in the feet. Early changes may resemble gout, with the foot becoming swollen, red, and warm. Recognition and treatment of this condition is very important. A seriously affected foot can become deformed. The bones may crack, splinter, and erode, and the joints may shift, change shape, and become unstable. Bunions. A bunion is a deformity that usually occurs at the head of the first of five long bones (the metatarsal bones) that extend from the arch and connect to the toes, and may be confused with gout. The first metatarsal bone is the one that attaches to the big toe. A bunion begins to form when the big toe is forced in toward the rest of the toes, causing the head of the first metatarsal bone to jut out and rub against the side of the shoe; the underlying tissue becomes inflamed, and a painful bump forms. As this bony growth develops, the bunion is formed as the big toe is forced to grow at an increasing angle towards the rest of the toes.  |
Click the icon to see an illustrated series detailing bunion removal. |
Some Diseases with Symptoms Similar to Gout | Disease
| Specific Subtypes
| Osteoarthritis
| | Infectious Arthritis
| Lyme disease, septic arthritis, bacterial endocarditis, mycobacterial and fungal arthritis, viral arthritis, osteomyelitis
| Postinfectious or Reactive Arthritis
| Reiters syndrome (a disorder characterized by arthritis and inflammation in the eye and urinary tract), rheumatic fever, inflammatory bowel disease
| Pseudogout
| | Rheumatic Autoimmune Diseases
| Rheumatoid arthritis, systemic vasculitis, systemic lupus erythematosus, scleroderma, Still's disease (also called juvenile rheumatoid arthritis)
| Fibromyalgia
| | Other Diseases
| Chronic fatigue syndrome, hepatitis C, familial Mediterranean fever, cancers, AIDS, leukemia, bunions, Whipple's disease, dermatomyositis, Behcet's disease, Henoch-Schonlein purpura, Kawasaki's disease, erythema nodosum, erythema multiforme, pyoderma gangrenosum, pustular psoriasis
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