Everyday Medicine by Dr Luke Crantock
Conversations with colleagues providing helpful ideas and advice in healthcare
Episode 133. Ehlers-Danlos and Hypermobility Syndromes with Associate Professor Chris O'Callaghan
Hypermobile joints were noted by Hippocrates as long ago as 400 BCE and are common, occurring in about 10-25 % of the population. In a minority of patients’ pain and injury results suggest that the clinical findings may reflect a condition referred to as hypermobility spectrum disorder, a polygenic connective tissue syndrome affecting between 1:500 to 1:600 people. This syndrome involves extreme joint flexibility often associated with joint pains, tends to run in families and is more common amongst females. Hypermobility spectrum disorder has been redefined separately from the more stringent diagnostic criteria required for the diagnosis of more extreme hypermobility syndromes such as Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, Marfans disease, Loeys-Dietz or Osteogenesis imperfecta syndromes.