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Ankylosing Spondylitis
(AS) is classified as a rheumatologic disorder of the lumbar spine. It is considered
one of the so-called sero-negative arthropathies. It's a type of arthritis that
causes the joints in the lower back - the sacroiliac joints and the joints of
the lumbar spine - to become inflamed. It will also frequently affect the hips
and other peripheral joints. Ankylosing spondylitis comes from Latin words meaning,
"bent spine." The disease has been present since antiquity and has been found
in the skeletal remains of Egyptian mummies. AS usually strikes a person between
the teen years and the age of 30. "The classic picture of AS is a man between
the ages of 15 and 40 with intermittent, dull low back pain and stiffness slowly
progressing over a period of months." Although AS was once considered to predominantly
affect men, it is now known to affect women as well. Although women seem to have
less progressive spinal disease, their peripheral joints tend to be more severely
involved. *
Symptoms
The pathogenesis of AS is not known, but a genetic predisposition to the disorder
does exist. Patients with AS often have stiffness
in the morning that lasts a few minutes to several hours, sometimes coupled
with fatigue. Prolonged
inactivity can cause more pain and stiffness in the back, unlike other lower
back disorders, which will often improve with rest. With AS, there may be pain
and stiffness in the shoulders, hips or other joints as well. After a few years
with the disorder, there may be pain in the middle or upper part of the back
and gradual stiffening of the spine and eventually the neck. The classic deformity
associated with AS is a rigid kyphosis,
which causes a stiff, hunched forward posture.
Diagnosis
Ankylosing spondylitis is often diagnosed after your doctor takes a thorough
history, performs a physical examination, and orders appropriate x-rays and
laboratory studies. There is a significant association of AS with a commonly
performed blood test that detects the presence or absence of a particular marker
in the blood called the human leukocyte antigen B27 (HLA-B27). A positive test, along with other
clinical correlations, will help to establish the diagnosis of AS.
Click here to find a doctor who treats ankylosing spondylitis. 

* Seimon LP. Low Back Pain: Clinical Diagnosis & Management. Norwalk, CT: Appleton-Century-Crofts; 1983.

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| Published: February 20, 2008 |
Updated: February 20, 2008 |
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