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SYSTEMIC VASCULITIDES. Susan F. Massengill, MD January 15, 2002. Vasculitis. Inflammatory, destructive process affecting arteries and veins Vessels may be small, medium or large PMNs, lymphocytes or eosinophils Necrosis or granulomas
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SYSTEMIC VASCULITIDES Susan F. Massengill, MD January 15, 2002
Vasculitis • Inflammatory, destructive process affecting arteries and veins • Vessels may be small, medium or large • PMNs, lymphocytes or eosinophils • Necrosis or granulomas • May be focal (skin or single organ), BUT usually SYSTEMIC (skin and multiple organs)
Diagnostic Assessment • Labs: • ANCA • ANA (10-20% positive, but rarely dsDNA) • Complement studies, • RF • HBV and HCV • Lytes, BUN, Cr, urinalysis
Antineutrophil Cytoplasmic Autoantibodies • Specific for neutrophils and monocytes • Two major staining patterns with indirect imunofluorescence • C-ANCA Proteinase 3 • P-ANCA Myeloperoxidase
Diagnostic Assessment • Labs: • ANCA • ANA (10-20% positive, but rarely dsDNA) • Complement studies, • RF • HBV and HCV • Lytes, BUN, Cr, urinalysis
Diagnostic Assessment • Radiology: • CXR • Sinus films • Chest CT • Histology (skin, kidney, lung)
Henoch-Schonlein Purpura • Most common SVV seen in children (ANCA neg) • Peak incidence at 5 yrs, 2:1 male preponderance • URI prodrome (33%) • Palpable purpura, arthralgias, colicky abdominal pain • Renal involvement • Hematuria and proteinuria (50%) • ARF (<20%) • Pulmonary and peripheral neuropathy uncommon • Testicular/scrotal hemorrhage and edema
Wegener’s Granulomatosis • C-ANCA • Necrotizing granulomatous inflammation • Upper/lower respiratory tract disease (90%) • Sinusitis, nasal ulcerations or erosions, saddle-nose deformity, subglottic stenosis, orbital pseudotumor • Glomerulonephritis (80%) • Tx: aggressive high dose steroids and cytoxan
Microscopic Polyangiitis • P-ANCA • Non-granulomatous • Glomerulonephritis (90%) • Pulmonary-renal syndrome common • Tx: aggressive combination high dose steroids and cytoxan
Churg-Strauss Syndrome • P-ANCA • Granulomatous • History of asthma and eosinophilia • Severe renal disease uncommon • Histologically identical to microscopic polyangiitis and Wegener’s
“Classical” vs. “Non-classical” Lupus is defined by its clinical picture, together with antibodies directed against one or more nuclear components, particularly anti-double stranded DNA. However, a considerable number of patients are excluded who belong to the lupus “family,” but who do not satisfy strict criteria.
Origins of Autoimmunity • Genetic factors • race, familial clustering, complement deficiencies • Female phenotype • Infective agents • Medicines
GREATEST RISK • Delayed Diagnosis by clinician • Young children • Male child
Diagnosis • High index of suspicion • Proteinuria • Membranous nephropathy • Henoch-Schonlein Purpura • Vasculitis
Clinical Manifestations • Fever, malaise and weight loss (80-90%) • Rash (50%) • Arthritis (40-60%) • Nephritis (35-85%)
Diagnosis • ANA (+) • “Lupus-like” patients rare • Anti-Sm antibodies (30%) • Hypocomplementemia (75%) • C4 and C1q >> C3 • ANCA
Cutaneous • Malar rash • Vasculitis • hard palate • extremities, pressure points, ears, fingers • Photosensitivity
Annular Papulosquamous Neonatal C2 deficiency SCLE SLE Malar rash Photosensitivity Bullous LE Generalized erythema ACLE CCLE-DLE Discoid LE Hypertrophic LE Lupus Panniculitis
Arthritis/Arthralgias • occurs in 40-60% • polyarticular, symmetrical • small joints of hands, knees, ankles • pain out of proportion to exam • Non-deforming
Renal Manifestations • Presenting feature in 25%, although 60% of adults and 80% of children later develop overt renal abnormalities • Proteinuria* • Microscopic hematuria • Hypertension (+/-) • Renal dysfunction (50%)
Renal Histology • Renal biopsy worthwhile in all patients with SLE who have abnormal urine and/or reduced renal function • black race • Marked variability • Renal histology cannot be predicted from clinical picture • If untreated, WHO class predictive • Interstitial changes predictive • Transformation
Therapeutic Interventions • Induction Phase • severe acute life threatening disease • Maintenance Phase • chronic disease • side effects of treatment • overtreatment vs. undertreatment
PANCYTOPENIA GRANULOCYTOPENIA Sepsis Drug reaction Peripheral destruction ANEMIA Chronic disease Red cell aplasia Hypoplastic bone marrow Autoimmune hemolytic anemia THROMBOCYTOPENIA Sepsis Anti-platelet antibodies Lupus anticoagulant Antiphospholipid Abs
Pulmonary • Pleuritis • Lupus pneumonitis • Pulmonary vasculitis • Infection • Pulmonary embolus • Pulmonary Hypertension
Neurologic • CVA (hemorrhagic, embolic, thrombotic) • aPLs • hypercoagulability • vasculitis • Infection • Seizures • Movement disorders • HTN • Neuropathies • Organic brain syndrome/Psychosis • Withdrawal of Rxs (EtOH, steroids, illicit drugs)
Cardiac • Pericarditis (25%) • Usually part of generalized serositis • Chest pain, cough, dyspnea, rub • Myocarditis (10%) • Libman-Sacks Endocarditis (15%) • tricuspid > mitral • Coronary Artery Disease / MI