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© 1983 All rights reserved

Urogenital Syndromes and Spondarthritis

Börje Olhagen


   Abstract

During the last 50 years there has been an obvious change in the relationship between Reiter's syndrome and spondarthritis, probably due to the introduction of antibiotics. Postgonorrhoeic prostatovesiculitis was formerly common: Romanus' spondylitics in the 1940s had a history of gonorrhoea in 35% of cases and 50% of my patients with chronic uro-arthritis in the 1950s had had gonorrhoea. Urogenital syndromes nowadays rarely develop into ankylosing spondylitis; on the other hand, sacroihitis is still a rather common late sequela, especially in females, however often asymptomatic.

The HLA-B27 tissue type is much less frequent in the urogenital syndromes than in ankylosing spondylitis. Accordingly one may postulate that patients with HLA-B27 negative sacroiliitis run a small risk that the disease will progress to ankylosing spondylitis.

KEY WORDS: Urogenital syndromes, Spondarthritis, Retter's syndrome, Anlylosing spondylitis, Sacrodiac arthritis


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