Rheumatoid Arthritis
Referral to a rheumatologist, tests & diagnosis of Rheumatoid Arthritis
A diagnosis is usually made by one of three routes. Some GPs carry out tests, make the diagnosis and then refer the person to a specialist - a rheumatologist, at their local hospital or a specialist hospital. For many people, after having discussed the initial symptoms with their GP, the GP will suspect that it is some form of arthritis but will refer the person to the rheumatologist to make a specific diagnosis of RA. A few people, who have quite severe symptoms at the start, go into hospital for care and tests to establish the cause.
Some people we interviewed were referred to the rheumatologist straight away, but this can vary and there can be delays in diagnosis. One woman then aged 30, was a bit worried at being given an 'urgent referral', but was relieved when she saw the consultant and got a diagnosis.
The urgent referral to the rheumatologist worried her but getting a diagnosis was a relief.
The urgent referral to the rheumatologist worried her but getting a diagnosis was a relief.
I, you know, and I went to see Dr [X] and he's my god [laughs]. He's, he was brilliant. He, you know, I'd like I said, I was at my last, I thought this is it, my life's over. And I went to see him and he, he explained everything. He, you know, everything, everything, everything you might not understand, everything, he said, but just you know, if you want to know anything, they give you loads of information.
But I think, I don't think you; you just don't take it in. You're so relieved that's it's not you, you know, you, you're relieved that they've diagnosed something, it's not in the head kind of thing. You know, you're not, you're not, you're not going loopy, there is something wrong with you. Well, he just you know told me what could hap, you know, not what could happen in, in a couple of years time. He just told me that, what's was gonna happen to me then, you know. And after being prodded and you know, various blood tests, you know, it came down to, I did have rheumatoid arthritis, so.
Waiting times to see the consultant rheumatologist also varied. The British Society of Rheumatology states one of its aims is for patients with RA to begin treatment within six weeks of referral and most patients are seen quite quickly. However, several people chose to pay to see a specialist; because they had health insurance; because they felt the wait to see an NHS specialist was too long; that they were not getting a diagnosis from their GP; or because their symptoms were affecting everyday activities and work and they wanted a quick diagnosis and treatment. Of the 38 people we interviewed six had seen a specialist privately and five of these had then transferred to NHS care. These people were mostly happy to pay to find out what the problem was and start treatment.
The symptoms were really getting him down, so he saw a specialist privately.
The symptoms were really getting him down, so he saw a specialist privately.
They put me on some anti-inflamatories, got in touch with the specialist at the local hospital, but there was a waiting list for six months, so I waited about a month and my symptoms got really, really bad and I was a bit confused of what was going on really, cos I'd always been a fit and healthy person and I was just like, I just felt absolutely washed out, tiredness, the pain, the inflammation and these, and these flu like symptoms were just really getting me down and I was spending a lot of time off work, and me job, I was struggling with me job, so I decided to go privately.
Went to see a specialist at the, at a local private hospital and I got seen straight away and he did some tests, did some blood tests, diagnosed straight away with rheumatoid arthritis and it just happened that the actual specialist I saw was the specialist that I would have been seeing at the local hospital, so it sort of, I jumped the queue basically and went and he got me in a couple of weeks afterwards at his surgery and I started on the treatment straight away from then.
At first they did the x-rays and the joints were normal, there was no joint damage and that was fine, they put me on a course of RA drugs, Sulfasalazine, anti-inflamatories and painkillers.
In making the diagnosis, nearly everyone had blood tests, the sample(s) being taken either by the GP (see 'Original symptoms of RA and visiting the GP') or the specialist, and the results being positive, showed that they had rheumatoid arthritis (RA). This is referred to as sero-positive RA. For some people the rheumatoid factor blood test does not give a positive result immediately or in fact ever, even though they have RA and this is called sero-negative RA. This can delay getting the diagnosis from several months to a few years; one woman was not given a positive RA diagnosis for 20 years after her first symptoms. Diagnosis has improved more recently due to the development of tests for the anti-CCP antibody, which is more specific and sensitive for RA, but requests for this test are restricted to specialist use in most places.
Having sero-negative rheumatoid arthritis delayed a definite diagnosis for 9 years.
Having sero-negative rheumatoid arthritis delayed a definite diagnosis for 9 years.
And the, I went back and I was under the care of this rheumatologist for a period of about 9 years, up until his retirement in '85, '86. And the level of treatment, though I still hadn't had a definite diagnosis all this time from the late 70s because I wasn't falling into any of the general patterns. It was only when the actual joint deterioration and there was actual evidence on the slides that it became apparent what way we were going and I was not able to go back to do the sports although I tried on a few occasions.
But going back, I mean, from the point of arthritis and that I started to learn everything there was about it and I realised that even under rheumatoid arthritis there was certain, no, nobody was going to be the same, everybody's different. And I sort of fell under the, what is regarded as sero-negative because I didn't have the, the proteins in the blood that would show up to give a clear diagnostic process.
Some people, but not all, are sent for x-rays, often of the hands and feet but if symptoms are elsewhere, then of that particular joint. People found having x-rays taken was not a problem (see 'Regular monitoring of RA and other diagnostic tests'). One man describes how the rheumatologist examined him, took an x-ray of his ankle and did a blood test to make the diagnosis.
The GP had her stiff neck x-rayed, thought it was RA, so sent her to a rheumatologist.
The GP had her stiff neck x-rayed, thought it was RA, so sent her to a rheumatologist.
And how did you feel about being sent for an x-ray?
I think I wanted to know what was wrong because I knew by then that it wasn't, a stiff neck as I indicated at the beginning of the interview. So, yes I wanted to know what was wrong, because, you know as I said earlier, you know, I've always been a fit person and to have a this long, long period of a stiff neck wasn't, wasn't normal.
Tells what happened when he first saw the rheumatologist.
Tells what happened when he first saw the rheumatologist.
They did various tests and blood tests and examined my joints and x-rayed my left ankle, which was where the main problem seemed to be and after about an hour or so I was taken into a room and the consultant told me that I'd got rheumatoid arthritis. He said my rheumatoid factor, which is something they measure, was off the scale, it was 20,000 and something, they'd never seen one so high and all this, it meant nothing to me, I hadn't got a clue, I thought arthritis was something grannies got when they were in their eighties.
He explained to me that women get it three times more than men, or were more likely to, and it can start in babies as juvenile rheumatoid arthritis anything from the age of nine months onwards, and it's not uncommon for men to get it between forty and fifty.
Various other tests were performed while doctors tried to diagnose the problem. One young woman had a liver biopsy and numerous other blood tests including those for tropical diseases and gonorrhea. One woman had muscle testing (electro-myogram) and another a Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) scan although this is unusal (see 'Regular monitoring of RA and other diagnostic tests').
Not everyone got a diagnosis of RA to begin with and other diagnoses were made. Some were of related conditions such as polymyalgia rheumatica, palindromic arthritis or another inflammatory condition. One woman was not happy with the diagnosis of psoriatic arthritis from the private specialist because from her reading she felt her symptoms were more like those of RA, so her GP referred her to an NHS consultant. Another woman describes how, after having an eleven year gap since a previous RA flare, she was initially told she had lupus (systemic lupus erythromatosus) and was relieved later when her rheumatologist confirmed that it was in fact RA causing her symptoms again. For those people whose symptoms began in childhood the diagnosis of Still's disease was made; this is now called juvenile idiopathic arthritis.
After an initial diagnosis and flare 11 years ago, she was re-diagnosed and told it could be lupus.
After an initial diagnosis and flare 11 years ago, she was re-diagnosed and told it could be lupus.
And so I said to her 'Well, what's the outcome?' or something, I said something like that and she said 'Do you mean the survival rate?' And I, and suddenly I thought 'Gosh! I didn't know we were talking about a condition that, you know, is potentially fatal'. And she said 'Oh no it very good, you know, it's very rare for anybody to have major problems with it'. And she, you know, she tried to be reassuring.
She said 'Oh most people, you know, don't have it in a severe form' and you know we had a conversation about that and I thought 'Oh well at least it's been diagnosed'. And then, but it preyed on my mind that, you know, it could be, become a much more serious condition and, you know, we went to see her and talk it through and I thought, you know, 'This is a completely new thing that I've not faced before'.
But then in the end it was decided that when I saw the consultant. He said 'No I don't think it is that, there is an overlap, some of the symptoms can be very similar but you don't have enough of the symptoms for it to be that'. And you know, he felt sure that it was just rheumatoid arthritis but, you know, at the time that just seemed another sort of upheaval.
And quite a shock over the phone to be told?
Yes it was, yes. Absolutely, yes, something I'd never heard of that could even be worse than, you know, the condition I, in a way, I think when I saw the consultant I almost felt relieved that it was only rheumatoid arthritis, bad as it was. You know, I felt 'Well this is something I've dealt with before and got through'. So, you know, it was in a really bad stage at that stage, but I thought, you know, it will settle down again and go away. So, you know, it was almost a relief at that stage to think it was rheumatoid arthritis and not this other condition.
People whose illness began with severe symptoms were admitted to hospital as inpatients and given different treatments. One woman was admitted by ambulance. Two had fluid aspirated from the knees and one later had the joint injected and the leg put in plaster. Several people were admitted for bed rest either straight away or within a few weeks of being diagnosed. A woman with undiagnosed groin pain was given traction for 2 weeks. This type of bed rest and immobilisation of joints is know not to be best practice now and keeping joints moving is advised where possible. In fact exercise, appropriately paced, is a useful addition to the treatment of RA.
Was taken to hospital by ambulance and after 5 days of tests was found to have RA.
Was taken to hospital by ambulance and after 5 days of tests was found to have RA.
But I came, after being in hospital for a about a week, I came home, and I just carried on as normal, and I realised that I wasn't normal, my body wasn't normal and I first realised it when I tried to open a can and I couldn't move me wrist and I knew that something wasn't right then. So then I got back in touch with the hospital, asked to see the specialist and, he did various tests while I was in hospital but he also did more when I went back to see him. And he said that I had rheumatoid arthritis and when I was admitted the previous fortnight it had gone septic and had gone right through my body.
Felt a fraud with no visible symptoms but went into hospital for rest then finally asked what was...
Felt a fraud with no visible symptoms but went into hospital for rest then finally asked what was...
So he said, 'My dear, you are not a fraud and I want you in hospital within a week'. The nurses went on strike that particular year so it was actually 12 weeks before I got in to the local hospital and I was there for about 3 weeks, and complete bed rest. I wasn't allowed to do anything for myself. I did insist on going to the toilet [laugh] 'cos I thought I'm not using those horrible bedpans. So they allowed me, I think it was a maximum of three visits to the bathroom a day, but I couldn't do anything else for myself at all.
Yes I was, yes and it took quite a long time to actually ask what it was that was wrong as I know that the specialist said, 'Oh I wondered when you'd get round to asking me exactly what it was you'd got'. You know, I just sort of sat there and I think it was in hospital that I finally asked him, 'Well, what is it then, that's wrong?'
So not at your first consultation?
No, no, I guess I just tried to ignore it. Again you couldn't see it, so therefore as far as I was concerned, there wasn't really anything wrong, just a few aches and pains and the fact that I couldn't pick a cup of tea up anymore.
Some rheumatologists reassured patients that 'it doesn't go on forever', 'it often burns itself out within 18 months' or 'it wasn't the end of the world and that I would be able to cope with it', but others gave the worst case scenarios of 'you'll be in a wheelchair by the time you are 30' or 'it could kill you'. Consultants often explained that it affected individuals differently.
Both GPs and rheumatologists began treatment for patients with a variety of medication (see 'Painkillers and RA', 'Anti-inflammatory drugs and RA', 'Disease modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (DMARDs)', 'Steroid tablets, injections and intravenous pulses').
Last reviewed August 2016.
Last updated August 2016.
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