232. SLE Flashcards
SLE Epidemiology (sex, race, age, risk factors)
Women in reproductive age (esp Black, Hispanic, Native American, Asian)
RF: Genes: several gene interactions
Environment: UV Light, Meds, Viral Infection, Cigarette smoking
Female Hormones (more activity during pregnancy)
How does SLE lead to immune dysregulation?
- Genes + Environment = impaired clearance of apoptotic cells
- Dendritic cells present self
- Activate and sustain inflammatory response of autoreactive T/B cells
- Activation of Th17/Th2 T cells and autoreactive B cells - produce autoantibodies
- ICs form between auto-Ab and self - deposit everywhere promoting more inflammation
What auto-antibodies are present in SLE
ANA: sensitive, not specific for SLE
anti-dsDNA: high spec to sle, assoc with nephritis
anti-Sm: high specific
anti-SSA/SSB - low spec but can cause neonatal SLE when cross placenta (HEART BLOCK IN UTERO)
anti-phospholipid - assoc with clotting
How does SLE cause Kidney Damage? What kind of disease types in Kidney possible?
- ICs caught in BM
- direct binding of anti-Ab to BM
- direct binding of anti-Ab to renal tubule
Membranous disease = subepithelial deposits
Proliferative Disease = subendothelial deposits
Clinical Features of SLE
- malar rash
- discoid rash
- photosensitivity
- oral ulcers
- arthritis (inflammatory)
- serositis (pleura/pericardium)
- GN (proteinuria, RBC/WBC casts)
- neurologic disorder (seizures)
- hemolytic anemia
- ANA+
- anti-dsDNA, Sm, Phospholipid
Current Tx of SLE (4)
- Corticosteroids - for ACUTE flares (too many SE: osteoporosis, DM, HTN, cataracts)
- Hydroxychloroquine - MAINSTAY Tx - decreases frequency and severity of flares
- Immunosuppressants - severe organ involvement only (MTX, Tacrolimus)
- Anti-coags if Anti-phospholipid positive (reduce clotting risk)