JOINT
HYPERMOBILITY SYNDROME
- Autonomic dysfunction (e.g.
postural hypotension, urinary problems)
- Intestinal dysmotility (IBS
is common)
- Laxity in other tissues
causing skin problems, hernias or prolapses
- Obstetric complications,
including premature rupture of membranes, precipitate delivery and
perineal injury
How common is JHS?
1.
|
Can
you put your hands flat on the floor with your knees straight?
|
1
|
|
LEFT
|
RIGHT
|
||
2.
|
Can
you bend your elbow backwards?
|
1
|
1
|
3.
|
Can
you bend your knee backwards?
|
1
|
1
|
4.
|
Can
you bend your thumb back on to the front of your forearm?
|
1
|
1
|
5.
|
Can
you bend your little finger up at right angles to the back of your hand?
|
1
|
1
|
TOTAL SCORE (maximum = 9, ≥ 4 is
suggestive)
|
Brighton Criteria for JHS
JHS diagnosed if:
·
2 major criteria, OR
·
1 major and 2 minor, OR
·
4 minor criteria
Major criteria:
·
Beighton score of ≥ 4
·
Arthralgia for > 3 months in ≥ 4 joints
Minor criteria
·
Beighton score of 1-3
·
Arthralgia in 1-3 joints, or back pain, or
spondylosis or spondylolisthesis
·
Joint dislocation, more than once
·
≥ 3 soft tissue lesions e.g. epicondylitis,
bursitis, tenosynovitis
·
Marfanoid habitus: Tall, slim,
arachnodactyly
·
Skin: striae, hyper-extensibility, thin
·
Eyes: drooping eyelids, myopia
·
Varicose veins, hernias, uterine or rectal
prolapse
|
- Late walking, poor
ball-catching and hand-writing skills
- Recurrent ankle sprains and
joint dislocations
- Non inflammatory joint and
spinal pain. Chronic pain, unresponsive to analgesics
- Laxity in other tissues
e.g. easy bruising, hernias, varicose veins, prolapse
- Functional gastrointestinal
disorder e.g. ‘sluggish bowel’ with bloating
- Autonomic dysfunction e.g.
orthostatic hypotension, postural tachycardia syndrome
NB Practice
points:
· Quickly look for hypermobility in patients chronic joint and MSK
pain, and assess the Beighton score
· Non-articular complications include
autonomic dysfunction such as ‘IBS’ due to gut dysmotitility, and laxity leading to hernias, prolapse etc.
· Obstetric complications such as PROM,
precipitate delivery and perineal injury – refer antenatally
·
Over-vigorous physiotherapy will make it
worse; core strengthening is key
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