Sec 27 The Skin in Vascular and Connective Tissue and Other Autoimmune Disorders Flashcards

1
Q

Identified as a candidate gene responsible for the development of autoimmune diseases; a transcription factor that regulates the ectopic expression of proteins, normally expressed in peripheral tissues, in the thymus, allowing for thymic expression of the latter and subsequent negative selection of self-reactive thymocytes before they migrate as mature T cells to the secondary lymphoid organs such as the spleen and lymph nodes.

A

Autoimmune regulator (AIRE) gene

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2
Q

Expressed on T cells providing an inhibitory signal upon their activation; also expressed on other immune cells including B cells and myeloid cells; encoded by the PDCD1 gene, with a SNP in its fourth intron associated with autoimmunity, including SLE and RA.

A

Programmed cell death 1 (PD-1)

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3
Q

Second most frequent clinical manifestation of LE after joint inflammation

A

Skin disease

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4
Q

The most common form of Chronic Cutaneous Lupus Erythematosus

A

Discoid Lupus Erythematosus

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5
Q

Fixed erythema, flat or raised, over the malar eminences, tending the spare the nasolabial folds

A

Malar rash

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6
Q

Erythematous raised patches with adherent keratotic scaling and follicular plugging; atrophic scarring may occur in older lesions

A

Discoid rash

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7
Q

Skin rash as a result of unusual reaction to sunlight, by patient history or physician observation

A

Photosensitivity

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8
Q

SLE: Oral ulcers

A

Oral or nasopharyngeal ulceration, usually painless, observed by a physician

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9
Q

SLE: Arthritis

A

Nonerosive arthritis involving two or more peripheral joints, characterized by tenderness, swelling, or effusion

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10
Q

SLE: Serositis

A

a. Pleuritis—convincing history of pleuritic pain or rub heard by a physician or evidence of pleural effusion Or
b. Pericarditis—documented by electrocardiogram or rub or evidence of pericardial effusion

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11
Q

SLE: Renal disorder

A

a. Persistent proteinuria— >0.5 g/day or greater than 3+ if quantitation not performed Or
b. Cellular casts—may be red cell, hemoglobin, granular, tubular, or mixed

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12
Q

SLE: Neurologic disorder

A

a. Seizures—in the absence of offending drugs or known metabolic derangements (e.g., uremia, ketoacidosis, or electrolyte imbalance) Or
b. Psychosis—in the absence of offending drugs or known metabolic derangements (e.g., uremia, ketoacidosis, or electrolyte imbalance)

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13
Q

SLE: Hematologic disorder

A

a. Hemolytic anemia—with reticulocytosis Or
b. Leukopenia— <4,000 μL total on two or more occasions Or
c. Lymphopenia— <1,500/μL on two or more occasions Or
d. Thrombocytopenia— <100,000 μL in the absence of offending drugs

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14
Q

SLE: Immunologic disorder

A

a. Anti-DNA—antibody to native DNA in abnormal titer Or
b. Anti-Sm—presence of antibody to Sm nuclear antigen Or
c. Positive finding of antiphospholipid antibodies based on (1) an abnormal serum level of immunoglobulin G or immunoglobulin M anticardiolipin antibodies, (2) a positive test result for lupus anticoagulant using a standard method, or (3) a false-positive serologic test for syphilis known to be positive for at least 6 months and confirmed by Treponema pallidum immobilization or fluorescent treponemal antibody absorption test

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15
Q

SLE: Antinuclear antibody

A

An abnormal titer of antinuclear antibody by immunofluorescence of an equivalent assay at any point in time and in the absence of drugs known to be associated with “drug-induced lupus” syndrome

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16
Q

Confluent symmetric erythema and edema are centered over the malar eminences and bridges over the nose. The nasolabial folds are characteristically spared. The forehead, chin, and V area of the neck can be involved, and severe facial swelling may occur.

A

Localized Acute Cutaneous Lupus Erythematosus

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17
Q

Presents as a widespread morbilliform or exanthematous eruption often focused over the extensor aspects of the arms and hands and characteristically sparing the knuckles. Has been indiscriminately referred to as the maculopapular rash of SLE, photosensitive lupus dermatitis, and SLE rash.

A

Generalized Acute Cutaneous Lupus Erythematosus

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18
Q

Initially presents as erythematous macules and/or papules that evolve into hyperkeratotic papulosquamous or annular/polycyclic plaques. Characteristically photosensitive and occur in predominantly sun-exposed areas. Typically heal without scarring but can resolve with long-lasting, if not permanent, vitiligo-like leukoderma, and telangiectasias.

A

Subacute Cutaneous Lupus Erythematosus

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19
Q

Most common form of CCLE, which begin as red-purple macules, papules, or small plaques and rapidly develop a hyperkeratotic surface. Early lesions typically evolve into sharply demarcated, coin-shaped erythematous plaques covered by a prominent, adherent scale that extends into the orifices of dilated hair follicles. Typically expand with erythema and hyperpigmentation at the periphery, leaving hallmark atrophic central scarring, telangiectasia, and hypopigmentation.

A

Discoid Lupus Erythematosus

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20
Q

Rare variant of CCLE in which the hyperkeratosis normally found in classic DLE lesions is greatly exaggerated. The extensor aspects of the arms, the upper back, and the face are the areas most frequently affected.

A

Hypertrophic Discoid Lupus Erythematosus

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21
Q

Occurs in approximately 25% of patients with CCLE. The oral mucosa is most frequently affected; however, nasal, conjunctival, and genital mucosal surfaces can be targeted. In the mouth, the buccal mucosal surfaces are most commonly involved, with the palate, alveolar processes, and tongue being sites of less frequent involvement. Lesions begin as painless, erythematous patches that evolve to chronic plaques that can be confused with lichen planus.

A

Mucosal Discoid Lupus Erythematosus

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22
Q

Rare form of CCLE typified by inflammatory lesions in the lower dermis and subcutaneous tissue. Approximately 70% of patients with this type of CCLE also have typical DLE lesions, often overlying the panniculitis lesions.

A

Lupus Erythematosus profundus/Lupus Erythematosus panniculitis (Kaposi-Irgang disease)

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23
Q

Lesions initially develop as purple-red patches, papules, and plaques on the toes, fingers, and face, which are precipitated by cold, damp climates and are clinically and histologically similar to idiopathic chilblains (pernio). As they evolve, these lesions usually assume the appearance of scarred atrophic plaques with associated telangiectases. They may resemble old lesions of DLE or may mimic acral lesions of small vessel vasculitis. Associated with anti-Ro/ SS-A antibodies, and is linked to Raynaud’s phenomenon.

A

Chilblain Lupus Erythematosus

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24
Q

Variant of CCLE in which the dermal findings of DLE, namely, excessive mucin deposition and superficial perivascular and periadnexal inflammation, are found on histologic evaluation. This results in succulent, edematous, urticaria-like plaques with little surface change.

A

Lupus erythematosus tumidus

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25
Q

Antigens with High disease specificity for SLE

A

dsDNA (doubled-stranded DNA)
Sm
rRNP
PCNA (proliferating cell nuclear antigen)

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26
Q

Antigens with Low disease specificity for SLE

A
ssDNA (single-stranded DNA)
Histones 
U1RNP 
Ro/SS-A 
La/SS-B 
Ku
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27
Q

First line treatment for Lupus Erythematosus-Specific Skin Disease

A

Topical glucocorticoids
Topical calcineurin inhibitor
Class I steroid qd–bid for 2 weeks alternating with pimecrolimus 1% or tacrolimus 0.1% bid for 2 weeks;
Intralesional triamcinolone acetonide 2.5–10.0 mg/cc

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28
Q

Second line treatment for Lupus Erythematosus-Specific Skin Disease

A

Hydroxychloroquine 6.5 mg/kg/day ideal body weight
Chloroquine 3.0–3.5 mg/kg/day ideal body weight
Quinacrine (if monotherapy fails, add quinacrine to either hydroxychloroquine or chloroquine) 100 mg daily
Prednisone 5-60 mg/day (2-16 weeks)
Thalidomide 50-200 mg/day; taper to 50 mg qod on response (2-16 weeks)

29
Q

Third line treatment for Lupus Erythematosus-Specific Skin Disease (safer immunosuppressives)

A

Azathioprine 1.5–2.5 mg/kg/day PO
Mycophenolate mofetil 2.5–3.5 g/day PO
Methotrexate 7.5–25 mg PO or SQ/wk

30
Q

Fourth line treatment for Lupus Erythematosus-Specific Skin Disease (limited by side effects)

A

Cyclophosphamide 1.5–2.0 PO mg/kg/day

Clofazimine 1.5–2.0 PO mg/kg/day

31
Q

Heterogeneous group of genetically determined autoimmune disorders that predominately target the skeletal musculature and/or skin and typically result in symptomatic skeletal muscle weakness and/or cutaneous inflammatory disease.

A

Idiopathic inflammatory myopathies

32
Q

Autoantibodies with High Specificity for DM/PM

A
155 kDa and/or Se
140 kDa
Jo-1
Mi-2
SRP
PL-7
PL-12
OJ
EJ
Fer
Mas
KJ
33
Q

Autoantibodies with Low Specificity for DM/PM

A
ANA (most common nuclear immunofluorescence patterns— specked and nucleolar) 
SsDNA 
PM-Scl (PM-1)
Ro (52-kDa Ro) 
U1RNP 
Ku
U2RNP
34
Q

Pathogenesis of Dermatomyositis - Susceptibility phase

A

Genetic predisposition

35
Q

Pathogenesis of Dermatomyositis - Induction phase

A

Loss of self-tolerance

36
Q

Pathogenesis of Dermatomyositis - Expansion phase

A

Loss of immune regulation

37
Q

Pathogenesis of Dermatomyositis - Injury phase

A

Clinical disease
Microvascular injury
Cellular cytotoxicity,
Weakness, fatigue

38
Q

Etiology of Dermatomyositis - Susceptibility phase

A

Fetal cell microchimerism

HLA-DQA1 and other HLA genes, TNF-α, other unknown genes

39
Q

Etiology of Dermatomyositis - Induction phase

A

UV light

Viruses (e.g., coxsackie, parvovirus B19, EB, retroviruses)

40
Q

Etiology of Dermatomyositis - Expansion phase

A

Autoantibody formation

Autoreactive T-cell expansion

41
Q

Etiology of Dermatomyositis - Injury phase

A

Autoantibody binding, complement fixation

Cytotoxic T-cell formation, cytokine production

42
Q

Hallmark cutaneous feature of DM. The confluent macular violaceous erythema, most pronounced over the metacarpophalangeal/interphalangeal joints, extending in a linear array overlying the extensor tendons of the hand and fingers.

A

Gottron sign

43
Q

Centromere

A

CENP proteins speckled pattern
20–30%
HLA-DRB1 HLA-DQB1
Limited skin sclerosis, severe gut disease, isolated PAH, calcinosis

44
Q

Scl-70

A

Topoisomerase-1 speckled pattern
15–20%
HLA-DRB1 HLA-DQB1 HLA-DPB1
Diffuse skin sclerosis, pulmonary fibrosis and secondary PAH, increased SSc-related mortality rate

45
Q

RNAP III

A

RNA polymerase III speckled pattern
20%
HLA-DQB1
Diffuse skin sclerosis, hypertensive renal crisis, correlated with a higher mortality rate

46
Q

nRNP

A

U1-RNP speckled pattern
15%
HLA-DR2, -DR4 HLADQw5, -DQw8
Overlap features of SLE, arthritis

47
Q

PM-Scl

A

Polymyositis/Scl nuclear staining pattern
3%
HLA-DQA1 HLA-DRB1
Limited skin sclerosis, myositis–sclerosis overlap, calcinosis

48
Q

Fibrillarin

A

U3-RNP nuclear staining pattern
4%
HLA-DQB1
Diffuse skin sclerosis, myositis, PAH, renal disease

49
Q

Th/To

A

7–2RNP nuclear staining pattern
2–5
HLA-DRB1
Limited skin sclerosis, pulmonary fibrosis

50
Q

Major criteria: Rheumatic Fever

A
Carditis 
Migratory polyarthritis 
Sydenham chorea 
Subcutaneous nodules 
Erythema marginatum
51
Q

Minor criteria: Rheumatic Fever

A
Clinical 
Fever 
Arthralgia 
Laboratory 
Elevated acute-phase reactants 
Prolonged p–r interval
plus Supportive evidence of a recent group A streptococcal infection (e.g., positive throat culture or rapid antigen detection test, and/or elevated or increasing streptococcal antibody test)
52
Q

Presents with acute onset of nonpitting induration of neck, shoulders, and upper back skin may be followed by involvement of the face and arms. Characteristically, the affected skin appears smooth and waxy, with tense dermal induration and prominent follicular ostia, at times imparting a “peau d’orange” appearance.

A

Scleredema

53
Q

Histopathology: Punch biopsies of affected skin reveal a nontapered (square) appearance on low power. The proportion of dermis in dramatically increased in comparison to adjacent nonaffected skin. A decreased number or higher placement of eccrine units may be appreciated. Fibroblasts are normal in number and morphology. The collagen bundles are slightly thickened and separated from each other by subtle deposits of mucin.

A

Scleredema

54
Q

Presents with confluent lichenoid plaques. Individual lesions and plaques may exhibit marked erythema or hyperpigmentation. The face is involved in most cases, resulting in significant deformity, “bovine facies”. The trunk and extremities are usually affected and often results in decreased flexibility and range of motion in the involved areas.

A

Scleromyxedema

55
Q

Histopathology: superficial to mid-dermal mucin deposition with admixed fibroblast proliferation. The pannicular septae is not involved and tends to be restricted to the upper half of the dermis.

A

Scleromyxedema

56
Q

Diagnostic Criteria of Relapsing Polychondritis

at least 3

A
  1. Bilateral auricular chondritis
  2. Nonerosive seronegative inflammatory polyarthritis
  3. Nasal chondritis
  4. Ocular inflammation
  5. Respiratory chondritis
  6. Audiovestibular damage
57
Q

Drug-induced SLE (typically without skin involvement)

A
Hydralazine 
Isoniazid 
Antihyperlipidemic agents 
Minocycline 
Procainamide 
Anti-TNF biologics
58
Q

Clinical Association: dsDNA

A

LE nephritis

59
Q

Clinical Association: rRNP

A

CNS LE

60
Q

Clinical Association: ssDNA

A

Risk for SLE in patients with DLE

61
Q

Clinical Association: Histones

A

Drug-induced SLE

62
Q

Clinical Association: U1RNP

A

Overlap Connective Tissue Disease (MCTD)

63
Q

Clinical Association: Ro/SS-A

A

SLCE, Sjögren syndrome, neonatal LE

64
Q

Clinical Association: La/SS-B

A

Sjögren syndrome, SCLE

65
Q

Clinical Association: Ku

A

Overlap Connective Tissue Disease

66
Q

DIF: Discoid Lupus Erythematosus

A

Continuous band of granular fluorescence at the dermal-epidermal junction

67
Q

Clinical Association: 155 kDa and/or Se

A

Classic DM

Clinically amyopathic DM with increased risk of internal malignancy

68
Q

Clinical Association: 140 kDa

A

Clinically amyopathic DM with increased risk for interstitial lung disease