VASCULITIS Flashcards
Define vasculitis
Systemic disease, characterised by inflammation within the blood vessels, disrupting the internal elastic lamina.
- May involve one or many organs
- May involve vessels of one size or many vessel types
Clinical features of systemic vasculitis
–Ischaemia to tissues supplied by damaged vessel
–Features of widespread inflammation
–Vessel rupture is extremely rare
Classify vasculitis
•Primary – multisystem diseases of unknown aetiology •Secondary – vessel inflammation due to –Infection ; SBE, cystic fibrosis –Drugs –Malignancy -radiation -cryoglobulinaemia -connective tissue disease
Name types of primary vasculitis showing granulomata and no granulomata
Large vessel - Temporal Arteritis (Granulomata)
Medium vessel
- Church Strauss -(EPGA) - granulomata
- Polyarteritis Nodosa and Kawasaki syndrome - no granulomata
Small vessel
- Wegener’s granulomatosus (GPA) - granulomata
- Microscopic polyangiitis and Henoch Schonlein Purpura- no granulomata
Mortality and morbidity a/w primary vasculitis due to ..?
Morbidity & mortality due to
–Organ failure – renal, pulmonary, neurological
–Effects of Immunosuppression
Dx of primary vasculitis
•Serology-ANCA; anti PR3 , anti MPO
•Biopsy-Affected organ
Occasionally blind
•Angiography-Large vessel disease
Define GPA
- Multisystem disease of unknown aetiology affecting small blood vessels
- Clinicopathological syndrome
- Most patients with active systemic disease are ANCA positive
- Relapsing, remitting course
Clinical and lab features a/w GPA
Clinical Features •Upper respiratory tract •Lower respiratory tract •Glomerulonephritis •Any Organ
Lab •Granulomata •Vasculitis •Necrosis •ANCA positive
Explain ANCA dx in vasculitis
•Less specific than originally hoped •50-70% ANCA positive subjects have vasculitis False positives in •Infection •Inflammatory diseases •Other, including lymphoma
Describe Bacterial Endocarditis
- infection
-acute/subacute
•Immunological stimulation leads to additional tissue destruction
•Immune complex mediated tissue damage
Clinical features of subacute bacterial endocarditis
Symptoms & signs are due to
•Damage to valves
•Immune complex deposition
•Systemic illness associated with widespread inflammation
Dx of SBE
- Clinical Suspicion – pyrexia unknown origin
- Blood cultures
- ECHO – vegetations
- Acute phase response
Tx for SBE
Antibiotics –
•treating infection removes antigen
•Immune complexes no longer formed
•Very rarely need steroids for immune complex disease.
Describe cryoglobulinaemia
•Cryoglobulins are immunoglobulins which precipitate in the cold
•Clinical manifestations are due to
Raynaud’s phenomenon
Vasculitis
clinical features a/w cryoglobulinaemia
palpable purpura- skin Raynauds- loss of coloration in fingers joints (eg painful mononeuritis) -Renal manifestation -Neuropathy manifestation -GI involvement
What is the hallmark for cryoglobinaemia
hint* triad
Meltzer’s triad
Purpura
Arthralgia
Weakness
Dx of cryo
Serum taken and kept at 37’C until separated in lab.
•1 ml serum drawn into 1 ml syringe
•Keep at 4’C for 72 – 168 hours.
•If precipitate there – estimate percentage.
•Check that cryo goes back in solution when rewarmed to 37’C.
•When positive, Type & assess for causes.
What can occur in testing for cryo
False -ve results due to
•The syringe is not warmed to 37 degrees C.
•The sample is not kept at 37 degrees C until clotting is completed
•The sample is centrifuged at temperatures below 37 degrees C
•The sample is not stored at 4 degrees C for 72 hours
List the types of cryoglobins
- Type I – monoclonal cryoglobulin
- Type II – Mixed Cryoglobulin
- Monoclonal component & polyclonal Igs
- Type III – Polyclonal Crypglobulin
- Immune complexes
What test can be done to determine cryoglobulin type?
Plasma protein electrophresis followed by immunofixation
What disease is each type of cryoglobulin a/w?
Type I – monoclonal cryoglobulin
Myeloma,
Waldenstrom’s Macroglobulinaemia,
B cell leukaemias/lymphomas
•Type II – Mixed Cryoglobulin •Monoclonal component & polyclonal Igs Infection (Hep C) Connective Tissue Disease B cell Lymphoproliferative disease Mixed essential cryoglobulinaemia
Type 3 - polyclonal - immune complexes
Connective tissue disease;
Chronic infection
Tx for cryoglobulinaemia
- Treat underlying cause
- Steroids +/- immunosuppression
- Plasmapheresis if life or organ threatening
How to distinguish CTDs from vasculitis
Ask the following questions
- Could this be CTDs/Vasculitis?
- What organs may be involved
- Does it fit a classical pattern
- Could this be a secondary vasculitis?
- Is serology helpful?
- What site for biopsy/angio?
Then do diagnostic tests •RF •ANF, anti-dsDNA, Anti-ENA •ANCA – anti-PR3 and anti-MPO •Anti-cardiolipin, anti-b2glycoprotein 1, lupus anticoagulant •Complement, Cryoglobulins •Biopsy •Angiography
Assess disease extent •Clinical Evaluation •FBC & antibodies if cytopenias •X-ray joints – involved & typical •CXR/PFTs/ High Res CT •U&E/ Urinalysis & micro/ GFR/ 24 hour prot •CK/EMG/muscle biopsy •Cardiac – ECG/ECHO/Holter/ enzymes •Neurological – Imaging & Neurophysiology
Assess disease activity
- Inflammation
- Organ Function
- Immunology