Calcium Pyrophosphate Dihydrate Crystal Deposition Disease: Nomenclature and Diagnostic Criteria

  1. DANIEL J. MCCARTY, M.D.
  1. Department of Medicine, The Medical College of Wisconsin;
    Milwaukee, Wisconsin

    Excerpt

    The variety of names suggested for the condition associated with deposits of calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate crystals is exceeded only by the variations of its clinical presentation. "Articular chondrocalcinosis" was used by Zitňan and Sitaj to designate the highly characteristic articular radiodensities used by them as the definitive diagnostic feature (1). "Pseudogout" was first used by me in these pages 15 years ago because we had discovered microcrystals of calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate in the leukocytes of fluid from inflamed joints (2). These seemed analogous to the sodium urate crystals associated with true gout that we had described previously.

    Both the diagnosis

    This 100-word excerpt has been provided in the absence of an abstract.

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