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
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 (formerly Henoch-Schönlein purpura; pictures 1234) 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
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]