The factors thought to be responsible for ulnar drift of the digits in patients with
rheumatoid arthritis (RA) are either external forces applied to the fingers during
normal usage of the hand or changes in the internal forces/anatomy of the digits due
to alterations in the supporting structures of the joints and/or their control mechanisms.
The part played by the intrinsic muscles in the development of ulnar drift is obscure;
their tightness may be due to adaptive shortening or a disease process. A consistent
feature of the rheumatoid process is hypoxia of the involved joints, tendons and associated
synovium. Our hypothesis is that intrinsic muscle hypoxia may also be responsible
for the loss of intrinsic function observed in many patients with ra disease, which
then contributes to the development of the characteristic deformities of ra hand disease.
We have taken measurements of tissue oxygen levels in the intrinsic muscles of the
hand of patients with a diagnosis of RA undergoing elective surgery at Mount Vernon
Hospital using the microelectrode technique established for measurement of synovial
tissue oxygen. Patients undergoing elective hand surgery for conditions other than
RA served as matched controls. Results so far suggest that the hand muscles of ra
patients are significantly (p<0.05) more hypoxic (mean oxygen tension 6.7%) than the matched controls (mean oxygen
tension 10%) and there is a trend of increasing hypoxia with the RA sub-group in the
radial-to-ulnar direction. Therefore, it is possible that the weakness and wasting
of the intrinsic muscles of the hand observed in RA are not the result of atrophy
secondary to joint disease but may be due to primary muscular involvement due to hypoxia.
Ethical approval has been granted for this study.
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© 2007 Published by Elsevier Inc.