1. Systemic Vasculitis
- Author
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Kilday Jp, Paul A. Brogan, Shah, John Walker-Smith, Peter J. Milla, Neil P. Shah, M. J. Dillon, Mike Thomson, S H Murch, M Malik, A. Ramsay, and Keith J. Lindley
- Subjects
Diarrhea ,Male ,Vasculitis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Abdominal pain ,Pathology ,Adolescent ,Inflammatory bowel disease ,Gastroenterology ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Intestinal mucosa ,Internal medicine ,Weight Loss ,Biopsy ,medicine ,Humans ,Intestinal Mucosa ,Fibrinoid necrosis ,Acute-Phase Reaction ,Child ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Infant ,Inflammatory Bowel Diseases ,medicine.disease ,Ulcerative colitis ,Abdominal Pain ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Systemic vasculitis - Abstract
Objectives: Indeterminate intestinal inflammation may result from a variety of inflammatory conditions in addition to ulcerative colitis and Crohn disease. The primary systemic vasculitides may present with intestinal inflammation and an indeterminate colitis. We set out to describe a series of children with primary systemic vasculitis who initially presented with clinical features suggestive of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) to establish criteria that might help discriminate between IBD and primary systemic vasculitis. Methods: Ten children (6 boys, median age at presentation 8.9 years, range 0.9-14.5 years) satisfied inclusion criteria. Results: All had abdominal pain, weight loss, diarrhea (6 of 10 bloody) and laboratory evidence of a severe acute phase response. Extraintestinal clinical features included vasculitic rash, renal impairment, myalgia, testicular pain and polyarthritis. Endoscopy showed vascular changes or other macroscopic findings suggestive of vasculitis in 5 of 10 patients. Gut histology revealed indeterminate chronic inflammatory mucosal changes and one patient with small artery fibrinoid necrosis in the submucosal vessels. Extraintestinal biopsy was performed in 6 patients and had a higher yield for the demonstration of vasculitis than intestinal biopsy. The results of selective visceral angiography was suggestive of vasculitis in all patients, but was normal in 7 cases of treatment-unresponsive classic IBD. Treatment comprised corticosteroid and azathioprine in all patients. Cyclophosphamide was given to 7 of 10 patients. Conclusions: Extraintestinal manifestations and inflammatory responses that may be disproportionate to the degree of intestinal inflammation provide clues to the presence of an underlying primary systemic vasculitis, and these data suggest that selective visceral angiography plays a key role in the diagnosis of vasculitis in this context. It is important to identify and treat any vasculitic component because failure to do so may result in consequential morbidity or mortality.
- Published
- 2006