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Vasculitides
Essentials
- Vasculitis has to be taken into account when the patient presents with systemic symptoms or ischaemic organ damage.
General
- The vasculitides are a rare and heterogenous group of clinical syndromes characterized by inflammation and injury of blood vessels. The vascular damage may cause narrowing of the vascular lumen, thrombosis, ischaemia, aneurysm or haemorrhage.
- They are often serious but still treatable disorders.
- Because of a variable clinical picture the diagnosis may be delayed.
- The size and the localization of the affected blood vessel determine the clinical picture.
Symptoms and signs of vasculitis
- Fever and weight loss
- Palpable purpura, livedo reticularis, skin wounding and skin necrosis
- Myalgia, myositis, arthralgia, arthritis
- Mononeuritis multiplex, stroke
- Epistaxis, sinusitis, haemoptysis, pneumonitis, asthma
- Myocardial infarction, hypertension, intermittent claudication, weak peripheral pulses
- Abdominal pain, melena
- Glomerulonephritis
- Elevated ESR, high serum CRP value, anaemia, leucocytosis, thrombocytosis, proteinuria, haematuria, anti-nuclear cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCAs)
Classification of the vasculitides
Medium-sized vessel vasculitis
Small vessel vasculitis
- Vasculitis associated with antineutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibodies (ANCA-associated vasculitis)
- Microscopic polyangiitis
- Granulomatosis with polyangiitis (formerly Wegener's granulomatosis)
- Eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis (formerly Churg-Strauss syndrome)
- Immune complex vasculitis
- IgA vasculitis (formerly Henoch-Schönlein purpura Henoch-Schönlein Purpura
- Cryoglobulinaemic vasculitis
- Hypocomplementaemic urticarial vasculitis
- Goodpasture syndrome
Giant cell arteritis (temporal arteritis)
Takayasu's arteritis
- Most common in young women of Asian descent. Damages the aorta and its main branches.
- In the early phases, nonspecific symptoms such as malaise, arthralgias and myalgias are frequent. Increased ESR and serum CRP concentration.
- Signs of narrowing of the arteries develop gradually.
- Weakened pulses in the upper extremities and difficulty measuring the blood pressure.
- Central nervous system manifestations
- The diagnosis is based on confirmation of arterial stenosis by clinical examination and by angiography.
Polyarteritis nodosa
- A serious disease that most frequently affects middle-aged males
- General symptoms: fever, weight loss, malaise
- Arthralgia and myalgia occur frequently.
- Gastrointestinal symptoms, such as vomiting, diarrhoea and abdominal pain are seen in about half of the patients. Haematemesis, melena and intestinal perforation may occur.
- Coronary arteritis may lead to myocardial infarction or heart failure.
- Renal disease, most often renal arteritis, which manifests as haematuria, proteinuria, renal insufficiency and hypertension
- Mononeuritis multiplex is the most typical neurological manifestation and occurs in one-half or more of all cases.
- Cerebral haemorrhage occurs in 10% of patients.
- Occasionally eye manifestations, such as episcleritis, uveitis and retinal haemorrhages are present.
- Cutaneous manifestations, such as exanthema and purpura are seen in 30% of all cases.
- The ESR and serum CRP level are elevated. Anaemia, neutrophilic leucocytosis, thrombocytosis, proteinuria, haematuria and a raised serum creatinine concentration are frequent findings.
- In the classic form of the disease anti-nuclear cytoplasmic antibodies are not found.
- Hepatitis B surface antigen and antibody have been found in more than 15% of patients.
- The diagnosis is based on the clinical picture and on evidence of vasculitis obtained at biopsy or arteriography.
Microscopic polyangiitis
- A vasculitis that preferentially affects small arteries and arterioles.
- In more than 90% of the cases there is a focal segmental necrotizing glomerulonephritis, which may be the only manifestation of the disease.
- Other manifestations include lung infiltrates, haemoptysis, arthralgia, myalgia, mononeuritis multiplex, purpura and fever.
- ANC-antibodies (most commonly p-ANC/MPO antibodies) are found in most patients. Findings in blood and urine tests are otherwise similar to those in granulomatosis with polyangiitis.
- The diagnosis is based on the clinical picture, biopsy findings and a positive ANCA test.
Granulomatosis with polyangiitis (Wegener's granulomatosis)
- Patients typically present with fever, weight loss and upper respiratory tract symptoms such as sinusitis and bloody nasal discharge.
- There may be episcleritis, conjunctivitis and arthritis or arthralgia.
- During the course of the disease, a cough with purulent or bloody sputum develops. Chest radiographs show single or multiple nodular infiltrates.
- Renal involvement is common and varies from mild focal segmental glomerulonephritis to rapidly progressive crescentic glomerulonephritis.
- Skin manifestations include palpable purpura, subcutaneous nodules and skin ulcerations.
- The most typical symptom of the peripheral nervous system is mononeuritis multiplex.
- A typical but rather rare symptom is proptosis, i.e. protrusion of the eyeball out of the orbita.
- Destructive lesions like septal perforation or the so-called saddle-back deformation may develop in the nose.
- Obstructive inflammation may occur in the trachea and in the bronchi.
- The ESR and serum CRP concentration are elevated.
- Anaemia, neutrophilic leucocytosis and thrombocytosis are found.
- Urinalysis suggests glomerulonephritis.
- c-ANC/PR3-antibodies are remarkably specific for granulomatosis with polyangiitis. Determination of these antibodies has made it possible to establish the diagnosis and commence the treatment earlier.
- The diagnosis is based on the clinical picture, the ANCA test and biopsy findings.
- Biopsy of the nasal mucosa or of the lung may show a vasculitis and a granulomatous inflammation.
- Histological examination of a kidney biopsy typically shows a focal segmental necrotising glomerulonephritis.
- The ANCA test should not be used as a screening test in cases where the probability of granulomatosis with polyangiitis is low.
Eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis (Churg-Strauss syndrome)
- A rare disease, which occurs in patients with asthma or a history of allergy.
- General symptoms: fever and weight loss
- Glomerulonephritis and joint symptoms are more rare than in microscopic polyangiitis or in granulomatosis with polyangiitis.
- Mono- and polyneuropathies
- Coronary arteritis, myocarditis
- Marked blood eosinophilia and an elevated plasma CRP concentration and ESR. ANC-antibodies of the p-ANC/MPO type are detected in about 40% of the patients.
- Lung infiltrates on chest radiograph
- The diagnosis is based on the clinical picture, a history of asthma or allergy, blood eosinophilia, lung infiltrates and typical biopsy findings.
IgA vasculitis (Henoch-Schönlein purpura)
- See Henoch-Schönlein Purpura.
- IgA vasculitis (formerly Henoch-Schönlein purpura; pictures 1 2 3 4) is most commonly seen in children, but may also occur in adults.
- In 90% of all patients an upper respiratory tract infection has preceded the vasculitic symptoms by 1-3 weeks.
- Arthralgia, arthritis, abdominal pain, melaena, haematemesis and haematuria may occur.
- There is usually a spontaneous remission within a week but relapses may occur.
- A chronic glomerulonephritis occurs rarely.
- The diagnosis is based on the clinical picture. Skin biopsy shows a leucocytoclastic vasculitis with IgA precipitated in the vessel walls. The serum IgA concentration tends to be high.
Cryoglobulinaemic vasculitis
- There may be an underlying infection, connective tissue disease, lymphoproliferative disease or liver disease.
- The great majority of these are caused by hepatitis C virus. Hepatitis B virus may be the causative agent in a minority of cases and some are essential forms.
- Mixed cryoglobulins have the properties of an immune complex vasculitis.
- General symptoms: fatigue, weakness
- Cutaneous manifestations in almost all patients: purpura, Raynaud's phenomenon, skin necrosis, leg ulcers
- Other manifestations include arthralgias, proteinuria, haematuria, renal failure, hypertension, hepatomegaly, mono- or polyneuropathy and abdominal pain.
- Elevated ESR, high titre of rheumatoid factor and low concentration of complement (particularly C4).
Differential diagnosis: secondary and pseudovasculitides
- Infections such as septicaemia Sepsis, endocarditis Infective Endocarditis, Lyme borreliosis Lyme Borreliosis (LB), miliary tuberculosis
- Systemic connective tissue diseases
- Vasculitis associated with malignant tumours
- Vasculitis associated with pharmaceuticals
- Diseases of the vascular wall, e.g. arteriosclerosis, Buerger's disease, amyloidosis, calciphylaxis, vitamin C deficiency (scurvy)
- Embolizations, such as atheromatous cholesterol embolization, endocarditis, mycotic aneurysms, atrial myxoma
- Blood coagulation disorders such as DIC, TTP, HUS and the antiphospholipid syndrome
- Vasospastic conditions, e.g drug abuse, phaeochromocytoma
- Hypereosinophilic syndrome, hyperviscosity syndrome
- If you suspect a vasculitis, refer the patient to specialized care for further investigations and treatment, as an emergency if necessary.
- As for treatment, it is important to bear the possibility of secondary vasculitides or pseudovasculitides in mind. These should be excluded before the diagnosis of a primary vasculitis is established. There are different specific treatment options for these conditions according to the aetiology, like antimicrobial treatment for the triggering infection.
- Vasculitides are treated with immunosuppressive agents, either glucocorticoids alone or together with cytotoxic drugs or B cell depleting biological drugs. In severe cases, the treatment is commenced with large-dose intravenous methylprednisolone and plasmafereses.
- Hepatitis C virus -associated cryoglobulinemic vasculitis has been treated successfully with new virus-specific drugs without concurrent immunosuppression.
- Vasculitides are treated in specialized hospital units.
References
- Jennette JC, Falk RJ, Bacon PA et al. 2012 revised International Chapel Hill Consensus Conference Nomenclature of Vasculitides. Arthritis Rheum 2013;65(1):1-11. [PubMed]