Abstract

The role of biomechanical stress and trauma in the initiation of inflammation of the joints and periarticular structures in psoriatic arthritis (PA) is currently not fully understood. Soft tissues and joints are the target for constant biomechanical stress and microtrauma, leading to inflammation. There is an opinion that this inflammation in PA is due to an analogue of the skin isomorphic reaction that develops in the skin of psoriatic patients in response to trauma. Some authors have called this reaction the deep Koebner phenomenon. It is assumed that the early, preclinical phase of psoriatic arthritis may be based on inflammation of the enthesis as a response to microtrauma, and explained by the proximity of the entheses and the articular membranes. Detection of early changes in entheses in psoriatic patients, including those who do not have complaints from the musculoskeletal system, is of great importance for the early diagnosis of psoriatic arthritis. In the literature review, the sources for the period 20102021 were studied, devoted to the role of the isomorphic reaction and microtraumatization in the pathogenesis of PA, as well as the role of various imaging methods for the early diagnosis of enthesitis in psoriatic patients.

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