Pocket Medicine: The Massachusetts General Hospital Handbook of Internal Medicine (110 page)

BOOK: Pocket Medicine: The Massachusetts General Hospital Handbook of Internal Medicine
12.78Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Dry eyes
(keratoconjunctivitis sicca): ↓ tear production; burning, scratchy sensation •
Dry mouth
(xerostomia): difficulty speaking/swallowing; dental caries; xerotrachea; thrush •
Parotid gland enlargement
: intermittent, painless, typically bilateral •
Vaginal dryness
and
dyspareunia

Recurrent nonallergic rhinitis/sinusitis
due to upper airway gland involvement •
Extraglandular manifestations
: arthritis; interstitial nephritis (40%); type I RTA (20%); cutaneous vasculitis (25%); neuropathies (10%); PNS or CNS disease; ILD; PBC
• ↑ risk of lymphoproliferative disorders (~50× ↑ risk of lymphoma and WM in 1° Sjögren’s)
Diagnostic studies
• Autoantibodies:
ANA (95%),
RF (75%)
Primary Sjögren’s:
anti-Ro
(anti-SS-A, 56%) and/or
anti-La
(anti-SS-B, 30%)

Schirmer test
: filter paper in palpebral fissures to assess tear production •
Rose-Bengal
staining: dye that reveals devitalized epithelium of cornea/conjunctiva •
Ocular staining score
: substitute for Rose-Bengal staining to determine degree of keratoconjunctivitis sicca using fluorescein and lissamine green •
Biopsy
(minor salivary, labial, lacrimal or parotid gland): lymphoplasmacytic infiltration
Classification criteria
(2 of 3 have 93% Se & 95% Sp;
Arthritis Care Res
2012;64:475)
1.
anti-Ro or anti-La or RF + ANA>1:320
2. Labial salivary gland bx w/ lymphocytic sialadenitis and score >1 focus/4 mm
2
3. Keratoconjunctivitis sicca w/ ocular staining score ≥3

Treatment

• Ocular: artificial tears, cyclosporine eyedrops
• Oral: sugar-free gum, lemon drops, saliva substitute, hydration, pilocarpine, cevimeline • Systemic: NSAIDs, steroids, DMARDs, rituximab

MIXED CONNECTIVE TISSUE DISEASE (MCTD)

Definition
(
Best Pract Res Clin Rheumatol
2012;26:61)
• Features of
SLE
,
systemic sclerosis
and/or
polymyositis
that appear gradually and often evolve to a dominant phenotype of SLE or systemic sclerosis • Different from undifferentiated CTD (UCTD): fail to meet criteria for any CTD; 30% go on to develop CTD over 3–5 y (usually SLE)
Clinical manifestations
(variable clinical course)

Raynaud’s phenomenon
typical presenting symptom (75–90%) • Hand edema (“puffy hands”), sclerodactyly, RA-like
arthritis
w/o erosions, polyarthralgias • Pulmonary involvement (85%) with
pulmonary hypertension
, fibrosis • Pericarditis most frequent cardiovascular manifestation; GI: dysmotility (70%) • Membranous & mesangial GN common (25%); low risk for renal HTN crisis or severe GN (if either, reconsider diagnosis of MCTD)
Diagnostic studies


ANA (>95%);
RF (50%);
anti-U1-RNP
in all, but not specific (seen in ~50% SLE)
Treatment
• As per specific rheumatic diseases detailed above

RAYNAUD’S PHENOMENON

Clinical manifestations
(
NEJM
2002;347:1001 & 2013;368:1344;
BMJ
2012;344:e289)
• Episodic, reversible digital ischemia, triggered by temp Δ (cold) or stress, classically:
blanching
(white, ischemia) →
cyanosis
(blue, hypoxia) →
rubor
(red, reperfusion); color Δ usually well demarcated; affects fingers, toes, ears, nose associated sx include cold, numbness, & paresthesias → throbbing & pain • Key to diagnosis and Rx is distinguishing between primary and secondary Raynaud’s
Primary
(80–90%=Raynaud’s disease; excluded all secondary causes)
• Onset 20–40 y,
>
(5:1); thought due to
functional
abnl of vessel wall • Clinical: mild, symmetric episodic attacks; no evidence of periph vascular disease;
no tissue injury
; nl nail-fold capillary exam; no systemic sx;
ANA; nl ESR

Other books

When I Found You by Catherine Ryan Hyde
The Indigo King by James A. Owen
Banksy by Gordon Banks
Independence Day by Ben Coes
The Gallant by William Stuart Long
For Her Eyes Only by Shannon Curtis