Costochondritis – Complete Lecture Notes

 

Costochondritis

Medical Students Edition


Learning objectives: define costochondritis, describe its pathophysiology, perform a focused exam, outline evidence-based management, and list key differentials.

1. Definition

Costochondritis is a benign, self-limiting inflammatory process involving one or more costochondral or costosternal joints without associated swelling. It is distinguished from Tietze syndrome, which presents with painful swelling of a single costal cartilage.

2. Epidemiology

  • Accounts for 13–36 % of ED visits for chest wall pain.
  • Peak age 20–40 years; F:M ≈ 3:1.
  • Most commonly affects 2nd–5th costochondral junctions.

3. Anatomy Refresher

Ribs 1–7 articulate via hyaline cartilage to the sternum; ribs 8–10 form the anterior costochondral “false” ribs. Each joint is innervated by intercostal nerves (T2–T6).

4. Etiology & Pathophysiology

  1. Repetitive microtrauma or overuse.
  2. Viral or post-infectious inflammation (rare).
  3. Associations: seronegative spondyloarthritis, RA, psoriatic arthritis.

5. Clinical Features

  • Sharp, localized anterior chest pain reproduced by palpation or deep inspiration.
  • No swelling, no systemic symptoms.
  • Pain may radiate to the arm or back.

6. Focused Examination

  • Inspection: no erythema, swelling, or deformity.
  • Palpation: fingertip pressure over costochondral junctions elicits tenderness.
  • Provocative: Crow’s sign (arm abduction increases pain).

7. Differential Diagnosis

ConditionRed-flag clues
Acute MICrushing pain, diaphoresis, dyspnea, ↑ troponin
Pulmonary embolismPleuritic pain, hypoxia, D-dimer, CTPA
Tietze syndromePainful swelling of a single costal cartilage
Rib fractureTrauma, crepitus on X-ray
Herpes zosterDermatomal vesicular rash

8. Investigations

Costochondritis is clinical. Imaging (CXR, ultrasound, MRI) only if red flags or atypical features.

9. Evidence-Based Management

  • Education & reassurance (cornerstone).
  • NSAIDs (e.g., ibuprofen 400 mg PO q8h × 7–10 days).
  • Physical therapy: pectoral stretching, scapular stabilization.
  • Intercostal nerve block (image-guided steroid/lidocaine) for refractory cases.
  • Surgery (costochondrectomy) extremely rare.

10. Prognosis

  • Most cases resolve within weeks to months.
  • Recurrence ~10 %; counsel on activity modification.
  • Return if pain becomes exertional or associated with red flags.

11. Exam Pearls

  1. Multiple tender joints + no swelling = costochondritis.
  2. Single swollen joint = Tietze syndrome.
  3. Reproducible tenderness on palpation is diagnostic.
  4. Imaging reserved for red flags.
  5. First-line: NSAIDs + reassurance + posture correction.

Sources: BMJ Best Practice 2024, UpToDate, American Family Physician, Cochrane Reviews.

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