Vasculitis Flashcards

1
Q

what is giant cell arteritis

A

Granulomatous vasculitis of medium to large arteries

Often involves temporal artery (often biopsy this) and ophthalmic arteries

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2
Q

typical age for GCA

A

greater than 50

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3
Q

more common features of GCA

A
  • headaches (due to ischemia)
  • fever, malaise, weight loss
  • markedly elevated sed rate
  • tender swollen artery, decreased pulses
    others: possibly vision loss, PMR
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4
Q

basic pathogenesis of GCA

A

basically inflammatory cascade narrow vessel lumen

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5
Q

when to dx GCA and what would you see

A

Biopsy temporal artery-will see lymphocyte infiltration, intimal thickening, multinucleated giant cells, necrosis, “skip lesions”

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6
Q

tx for giant cell arteritis

A

high dose steroids (60 mg)

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7
Q

what is PMR

A

Proximal upper and lower limb myalgias
Present for at least one month
Patients over 50 years of age
Sed Rate over 50 (more like 80-110)

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8
Q

how do you know if something is truly PMR

A

responds VERY well to low/moderate dose of steroids

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9
Q

what other vasculitis can PMR be associated with

A

giant cell arteritis

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10
Q

polyarteritis nodosa

A

Necrotizing panarteritis (involves all three layers of blood vessel)of small to medium sized arteries

Skin, joints, peripheral nerves, gut, and kidney are most commonly involved

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11
Q

MC clinical feature of polyarteritis nodosa (labs)

A

Elevated ESR, Anemia, thrombocytosis

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12
Q

Granulomatosis with Polyangiitis:(Wegener’s Granulomatosis) most prominent clinical involvement (3)

A

Upper respiratory tract (95%) - sinusitis, rhinitis, nasal ulceration, otitis media

Lungs (85%) - nodular densities, infiltrates, cavitary lesions

Kidneys (75%) - hematuria, proteinuria, focal proliferative GN, rapidly progressive GN

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13
Q
IgA Vasculitis (IgAV)
Henoch-Schönlein purpura

MC clinical manisfestation

A

GI - (85%) abdominal pain, GI bleeding (thought to be related to ischemia)

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14
Q

vasculitities that have palpable purpura

A

IgA Vasculitis (IgAV)
microscopic polyangitis
Leukocytoclastic Vasculitis

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15
Q

what are vasculitites commonly presenting with

A

Consider vasculitic syndromes when 2 or more organ systems are involved

Commonly associated with constitutional symptoms: Fever, weight loss, fatigue

Commonly associated with anemia and elevated sed rate

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