Gout Exams, Tests, and Diagnosis
Gout is often confused with other conditions, due to similarities in many of the symptoms (i.e., joint pain and inflammation). However, if you think you may have gout, you can expect your doctor to ask you a series of common questions during your initial appointment.
With that in mind, here’s the information that you should be prepared to bring along to your medical appointment:
- The family history of gout: Do you or have you had a parent, sibling, or immediate relative with gout
- Symptoms: What are they, when did they start, and how often do they appear?
- Triggers: Have you identified what triggers your symptoms (i.e., illness, stress, diet)?
If your general physician expects that you may have gout, he or she will likely refer you to a rheumatologist or an arthritis specialist. That specialist will likely complete one or a few of the following gout tests in order to rule out gout or determine a proper diagnosis:
- Blood test
Although blood tests can often reveal high uric acid levels in patients who’ve never had a gout attack, and vice versa, doctors will still often issue a blood analysis to check for unusual levels of uric acid and creatine in the bloodstream.
Doctors often request X-ray imaging to check for the cause of joint inflammation.
A dual energy CT scan is used only when a doctor suspects gout, but the patient is not experiencing inflammation. This imaging test observes the presence of urate crystals in a joint.
This imaging technique is more widely used in Europe, than the U.S., and looks for urate crystals in a joint.
This gout test extracts fluid from a suspect joint via a needle and examines the fluid for the presence of urate crystals.
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