Classic history and presentation:
- SC has a gradual, nonspecific onset of symptoms, where the patient describes pain, recurrent effusions, crepitus, and locking of the affected joint.
- Some patients may be entirely asymptomatic.
- Individuals may have a large effusion, apparent joint deformity, palpable mass, joint-line tenderness, mechanical pain, and muscle atrophy. Instability and effects on neurovascular structures are less commonly reported.
- The most commonly affected joints are the knees, hips, shoulders, elbows, ankles, and wrists, in order of descending frequency.
- Less commonly, the fingers, acromioclavicular, temporomandibular, proximal tibiofibular, as well as intervertebral facet joints and tenosynovial locations are affected.
- It is bilateral in 10% of cases.
- It is polyarticular in 5% of cases.
- Primary SC has an incidence of 1 in 100 000.
- Age – Typically seen in patients aged 30-60 years.
- Primary SC: Typical patient is aged 30-40 years.
- Secondary SC: Typical patient is aged 50-60 years.
- Sex / gender – 2:1 ratio men to women (ranges from 1.8 to 3 times more common in men compared to women).
- Rare familial association (related to type 2 collagen abnormalities, such as Wagner-Stickler syndrome)
- Aberrations to chromosome 6
- Fibronectin (FN1) and/or activin receptor 2A (ACVR2A) genetic rearrangement
SC occurs in 3 stages:
- Stage I (early) – Active, inflammatory intrasynovial process without loose bodies.
- Stage II (intermediate) – Active synovial proliferation with transitional loose bodies.
- Stage III (late) – Minimal inflammation and minimal synovial disease with multiple loose bodies.
Grade / classification system (if any):
- Primary SC –
- Rare.
- Idiopathic; occurs in an otherwise normal joint.
- Loose bodies are uniform, small, round, and more numerous.
- Secondary SC –
- More common.
- Occurs in the setting of joint destruction and synovitis (ie, osteoarthritis, single traumatic injury, repetitive trauma, osteochondritis dissecans, Charcot arthropathy, osteonecrosis, infection).
- Loose bodies are variable in size and fewer than in primary SC.