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sinovitis

Sinovitis, commonly called synovitis, is inflammation of the synovial membrane that lines joints and tendon sheaths. It can affect a single joint or multiple joints and may be acute or chronic. Inflammation produces swelling, tenderness, warmth, and pain, with often reduced range of motion.

Causes include infection (septic arthritis), crystal deposition (gout, pseudogout), autoimmune or inflammatory diseases (such as rheumatoid

Symptoms commonly include joint swelling and stiffness, especially after rest, with pain that worsens with movement.

Diagnosis combines clinical assessment, laboratory tests (CRP, ESR, autoantibodies as indicated), and imaging. Ultrasound or MRI

Treatment targets the underlying cause and symptom relief. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs or analgesics reduce pain; rest

Prognosis depends on cause and treatment timing. Early diagnosis and targeted therapy improve function and reduce

arthritis,
psoriatic
arthritis,
lupus),
injury
or
overuse,
and
degenerative
joint
disease.
In
some
cases
the
cause
is
unknown.
Fever
and
malaise
may
accompany
septic
or
inflammatory
synovitis.
Exam
may
reveal
effusion,
warmth,
and
limited
motion.
can
detect
synovial
thickening
and
effusion.
Synovial
fluid
analysis
distinguishes
septic
infection
from
sterile
inflammation
by
cell
count,
crystals,
Gram
stain,
and
culture.
and
physical
therapy
support
function.
Intra-articular
corticosteroids
are
frequently
used.
Autoimmune
diseases
require
disease-modifying
therapies;
septic
synovitis
demands
antibiotics
and
sometimes
drainage.
recurrences.