This review will suggest an algorithm for standardised histopathological diagnosis of synovial biopsies and synovectomy specimens. In principal, changes of the synovial membrane can be inflammatory or non-inflammatory. To the latter group belong some benign tumors, such as tenosynovial giant cell tumor, lipoma or synovial chondromatosis. Rare non-inflammatory changes are the group of storage diseases. Inflammatory synovial diseases can be differentiated into crystal-induced arthropathy, such as gout and pseudogout, granulomatous diseases, such as tuberculosis, sarcoidosis and foreign body reactions and into the large group of non-granulomatous synovitis. This last group is by far the most common and often causes difficulties in assigning the histopathological findings to a definite diagnosis. Therefore, the synovitis score should be applied in these cases as a diagnostic means, leading to the diagnosis of low-grade synovitis (which is associated with degenerative and posttraumatic arthropathies) or high-grade synovitis (associated with rheumatic diseases), the sensitivity and specificity being 60.5% and 95.5%, respectively. In detritus synovitis the synovitis score is not applicable.
Rheumatoid granuloma (RG) is histomorphologically defined as a subcutaneous palisading granuloma with central fibrinoid necrosis. Clinically, it presents as a nodule typically localized at pressure points near the joints. From the rheumatic pathological point of view, the main diagnostic challenge is the differentiation of RG from granuloma anulare, especially if clinical information on the site of removal, known diseases, duration of illness, medication and existing American College of Rheumatology (ACR) criteria are missing. Other granulomatous lesions, such as mycobacterial infections, foreign body granulomas, necrobiosis lipoidica or sarcoidosis, can be differentiated from RG by histopathological criteria or by additional examinations such as pathogen specification or PCR. An immunohistochemical marker for the differential diagnosis of granulomas is not yet available. Diagnosis is based on conventional H-E staining, alcian blue-PAS staining, polarizing analysis or PCR. In the following article, the most important granulomatous entities in the differential diagnosis of RG are introduced and the main diagnostic characteristics are discussed.
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