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עמוד בית
Sun, 24.11.24

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July 2024
Shiri Keret MD, Gleb Slobodin MD

A 90-year-old female with a medical history of untreated gout presented to the emergency department with acute low back pain. On physical examination, the area over the 4th lumbar spinous process was extremely tender. Serum C-reactive protein was 184 mg/L, and uric acid was 8.3 mg/dl.

Conventional [Figure 1A] and dual-energy computed tomography (DECT) [Figure 1B] studies of the lumbar spine showed multiple tophi-engulfing posterior vertebral structures of the involved vertebral unit, including the spinous and transverse processes and facet joints. This condition is schematically shown in Figure 1C with asterixis indicating tophi-induced erosion and osteolysis of the spinous process.

The patient was treated for a suspected acute gouty attack with prednisone and colchicine followed by allopurinol treatment with rapid and uneventful recovery.

Axial gout is an underdiagnosed and potentially curable cause of recurrent low back pain [1,2]. Referral to DECT should be considered in patients with uncontrolled gout and concurrent back pain.

October 2023
Shiri Keret MD, Aniela Shouval MD, Michael Lurie MD, Gleb Slobodin MD

A 52-year-old man with a history of gout presented to the emergency department with painful purulent ulcers on the left index finger. Serum C-reactive protein was elevated to 112 mg/L. Hand radiographs [Figure 1A] demonstrated almost complete osteolysis of the two distal phalanges of the involved finger (asterisk), with multiple typical gouty erosions with sclerotic margins and overhanging edges in a marginal and juxta-articular distribution (white arrows), and soft tissue tophi (black arrows). Osteomyelitis of the index finger was suspected, and the finger was amputated.

November 2015
Roni Peleg MD and Yulia Treister-Goltzman MD
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