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Dr. Russell received her fellowship in rheumatology from the University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She is
currently doing academic medicine at the medical college of Milwaukee,
Wisconsin. She is interested in further
work with vascular EDS.
One of the
cardinal features of the Ehlers-Danlos Syndromes (EDS) is joint hypermobility.
The presence or absence of hypermobility is determined at the bedside and is
largely the result of subjective and semi-objective comparison of range of
motion at selected joints to that considered “normal”. In addition, many different factors
contribute to motion that may be designated as “hypermobile”. However, whether
the particular patients’ hypermobility results in symptoms or not cannot be
assessed from the physical exam alone. Lastly, the patient I see at 9 o'clock with
hypermobility probably has a different molecular abnormality than the patient I
see at 10 o'clock with hypermobility. It
is therefore useful to keep in mind that EDS is indeed a heterogeneous group of
disorders and the molecular basis for
the problems that we see in the clinic are probably individual or familial and
not the same from patient to patient.
What causes hypermobility? What are the constraints in normal joint
motion? What prevents our joints from moving in all directions? The
motion of any particular joint has evolved to subsume a particular
function for the human who must also negotiate the effects of gravity
during their lifetime. There are many factors that have an effect on
what motion is allowed at any particular joint under normal conditions.
Consideration of these factors will enable the physician to establish
an accurate understanding of the problem in any particular patient.
Joint hypermobility and joint laxity are terms that are used
commonly to describe a recognized increase in joint range of motion.
Hypermobility is commonly used to mean that the range of motion of a
joint exceeds normal but does not necessarily impact on the patient in
terms of stability or symptoms. The "normal" range of motion is age
and ethnic dependent. Children are uniformly more hypermobile than
adults. In the adult, the hypermobile patient may or may not have any
pain or history of subluxations and dislocations. Given these caveats,
it can be difficult to determine if a patient is truly hypermobile or
not. We know that hypermobility is very common in Indian populations
and the entire population of Egypt is extremely hypermobile. Are these
people abnormal? No, if they don't have symptoms. It simply means
their range of motion is different than that of Caucasians. So when
approaching a particular patient, the physician must decide whether
this hypermobility is related to ethnicity and is physiologic or not.
Sometimes this can be difficult since there are few objective
guidelines to employ. Standardized measurements that create a
numerical correlate to the degree of hypermobility, such as the
Beighton score, can be quite useful in this setting.
Laxity refers to something beyond the normal range of motion but
implies a predisposition to subluxations; the distinction is subtle and
not always made and the terms are often used synonymously. At the
extreme of laxity, one begins to observe pathologic range of motion.
Instability is laxity that results in joint dysfunction and instability
is involuntary. Voluntary and then involuntary subluxations may
develop and, finally, dislocation of the joint altogether. There is a
continuum from one to the other. The presence or absence of pain during
this evolution will depend on the degree of injury to adjacent
nerve-containing structures such as the joint capsule. Often this will
depend on the speed of development of the instability with acute
disruptions and instability being the most likely to coincide with pain.
In approaching the patient, the physician must decide if they have
simple hypermobility or whether, in fact, the patient is having
subluxations and true instability of the joint. In either case, the
doctor must understand the process by which the unusual motion is
occurring in that patient. Joints exist in our body to provide
movement but there are a lot of normal constraints to joint motion that
need to be considered. First of all, the contours of the bone make a
difference as to how much joint motion is going to be allowed. There
is a very tight fibrous capsule that holds the bone ends together in
all of the joints in our body. That has a big effect on how much
motion is allowed. Some joints of our body, for example, the knee, the
temporo- mandibular joint, and other joints in the body have a little
pad inside called a meniscus, a fibrocartilage that helps distribute
force and also constrains the motion to some extent. Ligaments are very
useful to limit a joint's motion and these are fibrous bands that
connect bones together across joint lines. Ligaments often blend into
the tendons that are in that area. Tendons also help limit motion as
do the muscles overlying the joints. The soft tissues around the joint
in question also impact the motion and gravity itself contributes a
significant force. Lastly, the nerve supply to a joint is imperative to
the body's balanced use of adjacent muscles and abnormal proprioception
is known to result in dynamic instability.
Every time a physician
approaches a patient who is hypermobile, the integrity of all these
tissues needs to be kept in mind to accurately diagnose the cause of
the hypermobility or instability. Bone contours are difficult to assess
at the bedside but important as a potential cause of hypermobility and
subluxations. One can have damage to bone ends that will alter the
contours and some joints inherently have more bone constraint than
others. For instance, the hip is a ball and socket joint and has a
lot of bone constraint as to how much motion is to be allowed, the
shoulder has almost none; it is held together by soft tissues.
Congenital malformation of the bone ends, even subtle ones, are
increasingly recognized in subsequent mid-age development of
degenerative arthritis and this is felt to be secondary to asymptomatic
low-level instability. For example, the socket part of the bone for
the hip may be somewhat shallow and this would allow the head of the
femur to move within the joint capsule a little more than usual. Bony
contour abnormalities are very common and doctors have to be careful
when they are interpreting hypermobility at a joint that it is not
actually because of a change in the normal shape of the bone.
The capsule is a very important feature in constraining motion. It
has been estimated that about 40% to 50% of joint motion is constrained
by the capsule of the joint. Capsules have very few elastic fibers and
are very tight fibrous tissues. If a capsule is torn because of injury,
the capsule will no longer have the same integrity. The loss of fiber
strength may thereafter allow more motion than before the trauma and so
the joint becomes "hypermobile". So, in approaching a patient with
just 2 or 3 hypermobile joints, the physician has to be very careful
that they are not missing an anatomic disturbance that is causing the
laxity as opposed to a congenital collagen defect like EDS. EDS is a
group of disorders where the physical properties of this capsule are
abnormal and diffuse stretching occurs during routine use of the
joints. The capsule does not have much recoil, so if the patient
repeatedly stretches the capsule, eventually the distention will not be
reversible. However, in contrast to the post-traumatic joints, the
resulting hypermobility will be widespread and symmetric since the
inherited defect is throughout. These concerns apply also to the
intraarticular fibrocartilage meniscus found in some joints which acts
to disperse forces and to control motion of the bone ends. Tearing or
distortion of these tissues may result in permanently hypermobile or
unstable joints.
Outside of the joint, the bulk of the overlying muscles will affect
how much a person can move a joint. The contribution of muscles to the
constraint of joint motion is very large and is estimated to be about
30% or more. Some of this effect is due to spatial interference because
if the muscle is bigger, the bulk itself will interfere with motion of
the joint. But, most of all, the tone of the adjacent muscles is going
to help hold the bone ends together. The more tone you have, the
tighter the muscle's pull on the adjacent bones. This results in less
likelihood that the bone ends are going to move beyond their normal
range. This is particularly evident in people with EDS in the gravity
affected lower extremity joints. At nighttime, when the muscles relax,
patients with EDS may experience subluxations in knees, spine, and
hips. Lastly, it has been suggested that patients with some forms of
EDS have an abnormality in the muscles themselves. They postulate that
muscles from such patients always have poor tone (hypotonia) and that
this chronically contributes to the hypermobility. The cause of such
muscle dysfunction is unknown.
The compliance (the flexibility) of the connective tissues adjacent to
the joint also plays a part. One disease known as scleroderma is
associated with increased collagen production, increased thickness in
the skin, and patients complain that they cannot move their joints very
well. They notice that joints are indeed stiff. The joints themselves
may be structurally normal. However, because the overlying dermis and
sub-dermis are tightened, they really cannot move their joints very
well. The converse is true in EDS where the skin is often thin or
where the subdermal fat content is decreased. The thin, extensible
connective tissues in the skin and fat layers change the compliance of
these tissues adjacent to the joints. Thus the increased flexibility
provides decreased resistance to movement.
How do physicians examine a patient and decide whether or not the
patient has joint hypermobility or instability? The physical
examination at the bedside is still the best way of assessing whether
there is hypermobility. Passive range of motion testing, where the
doctor guides the joint without the patient exerting effort, tests the
range of arc attainable. Such a bedside exam can be done on all joints
but demands that the physician take care not to sublux or dislocate a
joint that is unstable during maneuvers where the patient has been
asked to refrain from protective splinting. The capsular distensibility
is tested by distraction of the joint and the excursion of the bone
ends gives a subjective assessment as to unusual capsule laxity.
Muscle bulk and tone are separately assessed. This requires some
experience on the part of the examiner for accurate interpretation. A
Beighton score will give some estimate of the overall hypermobility but
the distribution of joints involved can help with phenotyping EDS.
Instability, however, requires demonstration of loss of articular
surface congruity so that the bone ends can be shown to have moved away
from normal position. This can be demonstrated at the bedside in
peripheral joints but may need X-rays to confirm positions in the hips,
shoulders, and spine in particular.
Imaging is needed to evaluate a joints' meniscal status but
single-view X-rays and MRIs are generally poor tools to evaluate
chronic instability where alignment at rest may be normal. Sequential
view X-rays, however, can often detect instability in axial (spinal)
joints when the physical exam is equivocal. The doctor is then looking
for "slippage" of one bone over another at the extremes of motion that
suggests instability. In addition, recurrent dislocations in a joint
will result in changes in the adjacent bones over time and this can be
detected as a thumbprint of long-standing instability. X-rays can also
be used to see if there is a congenital deformity of bone ends
predisposing to hypermobility at that joint. Acute capsule and ligament
tears, however, are usually demonstrated by MRI which gives a clear
picture of major soft tissue disruption.
Other studies that may be useful include ultrasound which can be used
real-time to detect soft tissue instability (tendon subluxations, etc.)
It is not yet used routinely to study joint hypermobility per se.
Arthrograms (where dye is injected into the joint) are useful to
examine structural integrity of intraarticular structures but are not
good to diagnose hypermobility. A nerve conduction study can assess if
the nerves supplying a joint and muscles responding are working
properly. In the future, dynamic imaging, where images of something are
done during motion, will undoubtedly be further developed and this will
enable diagnosis of hypermobility and instability on a more objective
basis. Such imaging may allow anatomic clarification of the mechanism
behind the laxity as well. Also, DNA analysis of the patient may be
able to pinpoint the molecular defect quickly and this may allow a
targeted approach to repair or compensation for the defect locally.
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