Vasculitis Flashcards
1
Q
Arteritis involving elastic arteries
A
- Giant cell arteritis
- Takayasu arteritis
2
Q
Arteritis Involving muscular arteries
A
- Kawasaki disease
- Polyarteritis nodosa
3
Q
Immune mediated small vessel vasculitis
A
- Henoch-Schonlein purpura
- Lupus vasculitis
- Rheumatoid vasculitis
4
Q
Pauci immune mediated small vessel vasculitis
A
- Wegener granulomatosis
- Churg-Strauss angiitis
- Microscopic polyangiitis
5
Q
What are ANCA’s?
A
- Antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies
- Group of antibodies against enzymes in the azurophil or primary granules in neutrophils, in lysosomes of monocytes and in endothelial cells
6
Q
ANCAs as a diagnostic marker
A
- Levels reflect degree of inflammatory activity
- Etiology may be linked to neutrophils activated by ANCA cause endothelial injury
7
Q
ANCA’s role in pathology
A
- Can directly activate neutrophils, stimulating release of reactive oxygen species and proteolytic enzymes
- This activation can cause destructive interactions b/w inflammatory cells and endothelial cells
8
Q
ANCA immunofluorescent pattern of staining of neutrophils
A
- Anti-proteinase 3 (PR3-ANCA formally c-ANCA): cytoplasmic localization of staining target antigen being proteinase 3 (PR3)
- Anti-Myeloperoxidase (MPO-ANCA formally p-ANCA): perinuclear staining specific for myeloperoxidase (MPO)
9
Q
Polyarteritis nodosa organs affected
A
- Small or medium sized arteries
- Arterioles, capillaries and venules not involved
- Renal and GI involvment common
- Pulmonary vessels spared
- Generally a disease of young adults
10
Q
Polyarteritis nodosa microscopic features
A
- Segmental transmural necrotizing inflammation
- Fibrinoid necrosis
- Fibrous thickening of vessel wall
- All stages coexist in different vessles or the same vessel
- NO GLOMERULONEPHRITIS
- 30% are positive for Hepatitis B antigen
- NO assoc. w/ c-ANCA
- Elevated ESR, leukocytosis
11
Q
Polyarteritis nodosa slide 1
A
12
Q
Polyarteritis nodosa slide 2
A
13
Q
Polyarteritis nodosa slide 3
A
14
Q
Polyarteritis nodosa slide 4
A
15
Q
PAN clinical features
A
- May have acute, subacute or chronic lesions
- Htn, wt loss, fatigue, melana
- Renal artery involvement often a cause of death
- Symptoms are variable
- Rapidly accelerating hypertension, abdominal pain and GI hemmorhage
- Depend on the organs involved
- Kidneys, heart, skeletal muscle, mesentary and skin are most commonly affected
- Fever and weight loss are common
- W/o treatment it is usually fatal
- Anti-inflammatory and immunosuppressive therapy can result in remissions and cures in most patients
16
Q
Microscopic polyangiitis microscopic features
A
- Histologically similar to PAN
- Granulomatous inflammation absent
- Fragmentation of neutrophils
- Immunosuppression induces remission and improves long term survival
17
Q
Microscopic polyangiitis clinical presentation
A
- Hemoptysis, arthralgia, abdominal pain, hematuria, proteinuria, bowel hemorrhage, palpable cutaneous purpura
- Muscle pain and weakness
- Causes: immune rxn to drugs, microorganisms and tumor antigens
- MPO-ANCA previously p-ANCA (perinuclear antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies): 70% of pts.
- Involved arteries, capillaries and venules
- All lesions tend to be of the same age
- Palpable purpura of the skin, mucous membranes, lungs, brain, heart, GIT, kidney and muscle
- Skin biopsy often diagnostic
- May see glomerulonephritis and pulmonary capillaries