What is it about?

The study evaluated a group of 20 patients with gout with acute gout flares. Patients were recruited from emergency departments, hospital wards, and rheumatology outpatient clinics throughout Auckland, New Zealand. Patients were recruited at the time of the flare (baseline visit) and then reassessed at a followup visit once the acute flare had resolved 6–8 weeks after the initial assessment. We found the foot was affected by acute gout in 17 patients (85%). Objective measures of joint inflammation, including swollen and tender joint counts and C-reactive protein levels, significantly improved at the followup visit compared with the baseline visit. At baseline, high levels of foot pain, impairment, and disability were reported. All patient-reported outcome measures of general and foot-specific musculoskeletal function improved at the followup visit compared with the baseline visit. However, pain, impairment, and disability scores did not entirely normalize after resolution of the acute gout flare.

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Why is it important?

Patients with acute gout flares experience severe foot pain, impairment, and disability. These data provide further support for improved management of gout to prevent the consequences of poorly controlled disease

Perspectives

First study to evaluate foot problems in acute gout. The work has led to a number of foot-related studies looking at foot and ankle characteristics in people with asymptomatic hyperuricaemia and chronic gout

keith rome
Auckland University of Technology

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: Foot pain, impairment, and disability in patients with acute gout flares: A prospective observational study, Arthritis Care & Research, February 2012, Wiley,
DOI: 10.1002/acr.20670.
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