Sarcoidosis Flashcards

1
Q

Define sarcoidosis

A

Chronic granulomatous multisystem disorder, characterised by the accumulation of T lymphocytes and macrophages and non-caseating granuloma formation.

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2
Q

Risk factors for sarcoidosis

A

20-40yrs
FHx sarcoidosis
Scandinavian origin
Female
Non-smoker
Black ancestry - Afro-Caribbeans
Agricultural exposure, insecticides

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3
Q

What is acute sarcoidosis/Lofgren syndrome

A

Self-limiting distinct form where there is:
1. Hilar adenopathy
2. peri-arthritis (inflammation AROUND joints)
3. Erythema nodosum

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4
Q

Symptoms of sarcoidosis

A

General: Fever, malaise, weight loss, parotid swelling, lymphadenopathy

Lungs (90%): SOB | dry cough | chest discomfort | wheeze
MSK: bone pain | arthralgia
Eyes: dry | swelling | pain | photophobia
Skin: erythema nodosum | maculopapular erosions | Lupus pernio (red-blue infiltrations of nose, cheek, terminal phalanges, ears)
Neuro: facial palsy | parotid gland enlargement | headache
Cardiac: chest pain | arrhythmia

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5
Q

Signs of sarcoidosis on examination

A

General: Parotid swelling, lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly

Lungs: fine inspiratory crepitations
MSK: polyarthalgia | myopathy
Eyes: red (uveitis) | papilloedema
Skin: erythema nodosum | maculopapular erosions | Lupus pernio (red-blue infiltrations of nose, cheek, terminal phalanges, ears)
Neuro: CNVII palsy | peripheral neuropathy | cerebellar signs
Heart: arrhythmia | heart failure

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6
Q

Investigations for sarcoidosis

A

ECG: ?arrhythmia, BBB, pericarditis
Eye: uveitis, retinal vascular changes, conjunctival nodules, lacrimal gland enlargement

ACE: raised
Bone profile: hypercalcaemia
ESR: raised
CRP: raised
FBC: raised white cells + Ig
U&Es: raised Ur/Cr (renal involvement)
LFTs: ALP/GGT raised

CXR: peri-hilar lymphadenopathy
Spirometry: restrictive (reduced FEV1 + FVC, normal ratio)
HRCT: Diffuse lung involvement
Transbronchial lung biopsy: Non-caseating granulomas
Bronchoalveolar lavage: BA: lymphocytosis
Gallium 67: Panda sign uptake patterns

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7
Q

Management for sarcoidosis

A

Asymptomatic: observation

Symptomatic:
First line: Steroids e.g. Prednisolone
+ Osteoporosis prevention e.g. bisphosphonates (caution with vit D/calcium due to risk of hypercalcaemia)
Second line: Steroid-sparing agents e.g. methotrexate, azathioprine, leflunomide, mycophenolate, hydroxychloroquine

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8
Q

Complications of sarcoidosis

A

Pulmonary: Haemoptysis | pulmonary hypertension
Cardiac: congestive heart failure | heart block | ventricular arrhythmias
Neuro: meningeal disease | CNS parenchymal disease | spinal canal disease | neuropathy | myopathy | pituitary lesions
Ocular: Glaucoma | cataracts | vascular retinitis | vision loss | optic atrophy
Metabolic: hypercalcaemia

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9
Q

Prognosis for sarcoidosis

A

Spontaneous remissions occur in 55% to 90% of patients with stage I disease
Most burns out within 1-2 years
Some require treatment and go into remission
Some may develop chronic sarcoidosis and continue to suffer flare ups

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