Posts Tagged ‘autoimmune’

Neurosarcoidosis

Sunday, March 15th, 2009

(Double click any word for definition)

The frequency of neurologic involvement is generally 5% of all cases of sarcoidosis

About two thirds of patients with neurosarcoidosis have a self-limited monophasic illness, the rest have a chronic remitting relapsing course

Occurs in adults aged 25-50 years

Neurosarcoidosis generally occurs within 2 years of onset of sarcoidosis

If diagnosis of sarcoidosis is known then symptoms may not pose diagnostic challenge (however other differential should be kept in mind esp. Infections)


Clinical Features

Any cranial nerve may be involved

Facial nerve most commonly involved – (Heerfordt syndrome – fever, uveitis, facial nerve palsy)

Peripheral nerve involvement – Mononeuropathy, mononeuritis multiplex, polyneuropathy

Central nervous system involvement may affect the hypothalamus/pituitary gland, cerebral cortex, cerebellum, and rarely spinal cord

Space-occupying lesion of brain (necrotizing sarcoidosis may manifest as agranulomatous mass lesion)

Hypopituitarism (and other endocrine manifestations)

Optic neuritis leading to optic atrophy (and other forms of eye involvement)

Meningitis, especially basal brain involvement

Cerebral infarct or transient ischemic attack due to vasculitis

Spinal cord lesions are rare (Intramedullary lesions resemble demyelinating disease)

Brain stem (sarcoid brainstem encephalitis) and cerebellar involvement (rare)

Seizures may be the first manifestation of neurosarcoidosis

Look for other signs of “regular” sarcoidosis


Workup

CSF may be normal 30%. When abnormal CSF may have nonspecific pattern with high protein level (>0.5 g/L), high leukocyte count (>5 cells/µL), usually lymphocytosis

ACE, lysozyme, and beta2-microglobulin can be elevated in the CSF

Imaging (esp MRI & CT brain) may localize lesions and give other clues

Biopsy of involved tissue to look for non-caseating granulomas


Treatment

Immunosuppressive therapy steroids, azathioprine, cyclosporine, cyclophosphamide, infliximab and methotrexate

Low dose cranial irradiation

Sjogren’s Syndrome – Quick review

Tuesday, February 24th, 2009

(Double click any word to bring up definition)

Sjogren’s syndrome is an auto-immune disease characterized predominantly by destruction of exocrine glands, particularly salivary and eye glands.

May be primary or secondary when it occurs in association with other connective tissue disorders (e.g. Rheumatoid Arthritis)

Pathogenesis

  • Auto-immune with a speculative role of molecular mimicry of environmental pathogens
  • Auto-antibody titers (Anti-Ro & Anti-La) do not correlate with disease activity

Clinical Criteria

  1. Ocular symptoms
    1. Persistent, troublesome dry eyes every day > 3 months
    2. Recurrent sensation of sand or gravel in the eyes
    3. Use of tear substitutes > 3 times/day
  2. Oral symptoms
    1. Feeling of dry mouth every day > 3 months
    2. Recurrent feeling of swollen salivary glands as an adult
    3. Need to drink liquids to aid swallowing food
  3. Objective evidence of dry eyes
    1. Schirmer Test
    2. Rose Bengal Staining
  4. Objective evidence of salivary gland involvement
    1. Salivary gland scintigraphy
    2. Parotid serigraphy
    3. Unstimulated whole sialomentry
  5. Lacrimal gland biopsy with changes suggestive of Sjogren’s Syndrome
  6. Auto-antibodies
    1. Anti SS-A (Ro) or Anti SS-B (La)
    2. ANA
    3. IgM Rheumatoid factor

For primary Sjogren’s syndrome four out of six criteria are required (including positive biopsy or antibodies).

For secondary Sjogren’s syndrome an established diagnosis of a connective tissue disorder plus two objective tests of dry mouth or eyes are required.

Exclusions to the criteria

  1. Previous radiotherapy to head & neck
  2. Lymphoma
  3. Sarcoidosis
  4. Graft vs Host disease
  5. Certain infections e.g. hepatitis C, HTLV-1, HIV

Symptom complexes can be divided into glandular (involvement of exocrine glands) and extra-glandular.

Glandular symptoms

  1. Sicca complex (xerophthalmia & xerostomia)
  2. Nose/throat – e.g. Epistaxis, hoarseness of voice
  3. Pulmonary – e.g. Dry cough
  4. Genitourinary- e.g. Dyspareunia, dysuria, vaginal dryness

Extra-glandular symptoms

  1. Skin & vascular – e.g. Vasculitis, Raynaud’s, photosenstivity
  2. Airways – Interstitial pneumonitis, COPD, BOOP
  3. Musculoskeletal – Polyarthritis, myopathy, polymyositis
  4. Renal – Renal tubular acidosis, interstitial nephritis, glomerulonephritis
  5. Neurologic – Peripheral neuropathy, Multiple sclerosis like lesions, TIA & stroke, Cognitive dysfunction, spinal cord dysfunction including transverse myelitis
  6. Gastrointestinal – Hepatomegaly, Primary biliary cirrhosis
  7. Neoplasia – Lymphadenopathy, lymphoma, pseudolymphoma
  8. Association with other auto-immune syndromes

Treatment

Symptomatic – artificial tears, artificial saliva etc

NSAIDS, Hydroxychloroquine, Prednisone, Methotrexate