VASCULITIS
VASCULITIS
VASCULITIS
DR MUDASSIRA
Associate Professor
Pathology Department
MIMC
LOs
By the end of this session you will be able to:
Classify vasculitis
Describe the Pathogenic mechanisms of vasculitis
Describe the morphological features of different
vasculitis
WHAT IS VASCULITIS ?
small vessel
large vessel vasculitis
vasculitis medium vessel
vasculitis
delayed
hyper
sensitivity
reaction anti endothelial
cell antibodies
giant cell immune
complex kawasaki
arteritis disease
mediated
PAN
pauci imune
ANCA mediated immune
wegeners complex
granulomatosus mediated
Churg-Strauss SLE
syndrome
Pathogenesis
Others:
Physical and chemical injury e.g trauma, irradiation,
toxins
Non Infectious Vasculitis: Immune mediated
inflammation
Most systemic vasculitides probably have an
immune etiology:
1. Immune complex deposition
4. Autoreactive T cells
Immune complex deposition
Immune reactants and complement can be
detected in the serum or vessels of patients
with vasculitis e.g.,
DNA-anti-DNA complexes are present in the
vascular lesions of systemic lupus
erythematosus-associated vasculitis
HBsAg- anti-HBsAg complexes in hepatitis-
induced vasculitis eg polyarteritis nodosa )
Drugs act as haptens or antigens in
hypersensitivity reactions against drugs eg
penicillin, conjugate serum proteins streptokinase
Immune complex deposition
This muscular artery demonstrates vasculitis with
chronic inflammatory cell infiltrates.
The endothelial cells proliferation and
the lumen is absent
Systemic Lupus Erythematosis- SLE
Vasculitis
Leukoclastic
PAN
Antineutrophil cytoplasmic
antibodies
in endothelial cells
Types of ANCA
Antineutrophil Cytoplasmic Antibodies
Chemical mediators
These antibodies
from neutrophils
activate and
damage the
degranulate
endothelium and
neutrophils
vessel wall
Antineutrophil Cytoplasmic Antibodies
Importance:
Useful quantitative diagnostic markers
Antibodies to ECs
predispose to certain vasculitis e.g SLE and
Kawasaki disease
Anti-endothelial Cell Antibodies
Auto reactive T cells
elderly people
•Temporal artery of a
patient with giant-cell
arteritis shows a
thickened, nodular, and
tender segment of a
vessel on the surface of
head (arrow)
Temporal arteritis
Microscopy:
•Granulomatous
inflammation of media
with mononuclear
infiltrate and giant cells
•Internal elastic lamina
fragmentation,
A. Temporal art. Giant
cells in the media.
B. Elastic tissue stain
focal destruction of
internal elastic
membrane (arrow)
and intimal
thickening (IT)
Clinical manifestations:
Unilateral throbbing headache
Tender nodules along temporal artery course
Jaw claudication- pain when chewing
Impaired vision- cause occln of opth artery
Poly Myalgia Rhumatica – pain & stiffness of
proximal muscles (Shoulder and pelvic muscles) most
commonly noted in mornings
?
Can anyone be alive without a
pulse
Takayasu Arteritis
Granulomatous vasculitis of medium sized and
larger arteries characterized principally by
ocular disturbances and marked weakening of
the pulses in the upper extremities (pulseless
disease).
Mostly affects young women, 30-50 yrs
Takayasu arteritis
Gross: Disease of medium &
large arteries
Thickening of aortic arch or
proximal great vessels
Pulmonary arteries
coronary arteries
A,
Aortic arch angiogram narrowing
of brachiocephalic, carotid, and
subclavian arteries (arrows).
B, cross-sections of
the right carotid artery marked
intimal thickening with minimal
residual lumen.
Takayasu arteritis
Microscopy: Mono nuclear infilt.
Perivascular cuffing of vasa vasorum in adventitia
medial necrosis and mononuclear inflammation in
wall
granulomatous changes with giant cells
Clinical manifestations
Fever
Weak pulses in upper extremities pulseless disease
Arthralgias, syncope, skin nodules, night sweats
claudications, bruits may be heard over the
subclavian arteries
visual and neurologic disturbances
Polyarteritis Nodosa
Segmental transmural Inflammation and
fibrinoid necrosis of small or medium-sized
muscular arteries
Typically involves the renal and visceral
vessels and spares the pulmonary circulation.
middle-aged men
PAN Morphology :
segmental fibrinoid necrosis and thrombotic occlusion of a
small artery. Note that part of the vessel (upper right, arrow) is
uninvolved
Polyarteritis Nodosa (cont,d)
The major features of this disease are
Intestinal infarction and hemorrhage (bowel,
pancreas, gallbladder),
Neuropathy
Myalgia