| Literature DB >> 22379458 |
Marco A Alba1, Georgina Espígol-Frigolé, Sergio Prieto-González, Itziar Tavera-Bahillo, Ana García-Martínez, Montserrat Butjosa, José Hernández-Rodríguez, Maria C Cid.
Abstract
The central nervous system (CNS) may be involved by a variety of inflammatory diseases of blood vessels. These include primary angiitis of the central nervous system (PACNS), a rare disorder specifically targeting the CNS vasculature, and the systemic vasculitides which may affect the CNS among other organs and systems. Both situations are severe and convey a guarded prognosis. PACNS usually presents with headache and cognitive impairment. Focal symptoms are infrequent at disease onset but are common in more advanced stages. The diagnosis of PACNS is difficult because, although magnetic resonance imaging is almost invariably abnormal, findings are non specific. Angiography has limited sensitivity and specificity. Brain and leptomeningeal biopsy may provide a definitive diagnosis when disclosing blood vessel inflammation and are also useful to exclude other conditions presenting with similar findings. However, since lesions are segmental, a normal biopsy does not completely exclude PACNS. Secondary CNS involvement by systemic vasculitis occurs in less than one fifth of patients but may be devastating. A prompt recognition and aggressive treatment is crucial to avoid permanent damage and dysfunction. Glucocorticoids and cyclophosphamide are recommended for patients with PACNS and for patients with secondary CNS involvement by small-medium-sized systemic vasculitis. CNS involvement in large-vessel vasculitis is usually managed with high-dose glucocorticoids (giant-cell arteritis) or glucocorticoids and immunosuppressive agents (Takayasu's disease). However, in large vessel vasculitis, where CNS symptoms are usually due to involvement of extracranial arteries (Takayasu's disease) or proximal portions of intracranial arteries (giant-cell arteritis), revascularization procedures may also have an important role.Entities:
Keywords: Central nervous system.; Vasculitis
Year: 2011 PMID: 22379458 PMCID: PMC3151598 DOI: 10.2174/157015911796557920
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Neuropharmacol ISSN: 1570-159X Impact factor: 7.363
Mimics of Primary Angiitis of the Central Nervous System
| Viral (HIV, varicella zoster, progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy) |
| Borreliosis |
| Tuberculosis |
| Syphilis |
| Whipple’s disease |
| Endocarditis |
| Systemic Vasculitis |
| Behçet’s disease |
| Neurosarcoidosis |
| Systemic lupus erythematosus |
| Reversible vasoconstriction syndromes (RVCS) |
| Atherosclerosis |
| Susac’s syndrome |
| Radiation vasculopathy |
| Ehlers-Danlos disease |
| Kohlmeyer- Degos disease |
| Fibromuscular dysplasia |
| Fabry’s disease |
| Moya-moya disease |
| Amyloid angiopathy |
| CADASIL |
| Mitochondrial diseases (MELAS) |
| Multiple sclerosis |
| Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis |
| Antiphospholipid syndrome |
| Hypercoagulability states |
| Cholesterol embolisms |
| Cardiac myxoma |
| Nonbacterial thrombotic endocarditis |
| Multifocal glioma |
| CNS lymphoma |
| Angiocentric lymphoma |
| Intravascular lymphoma (malignant angioendotheliomatosis) |
Clinical, Laboratory, Imaging and Histopathologic Characteristics Useful to Distinguish RVCS from PACNS
| RVCS | PACNS | |
|---|---|---|
| age | 20-40 years | 40-60 years |
| gender | primarily women | more frequent in men |
| trigger (drugs, postpartum etc) | frequently identified | absent |
| headache | acute and severe | insidious |
| cognitive impairment | unusual | frequent |
| Normal or minimal protein increase | Abnormal (increased protein concentration and mild pleocytosis) | |
| Normal (>70%) | Abnormal in 90%. Small infarcts in grey and white matter in multiple vascular territories, diffuse white matter lesions, mass lesions | |
| Abnormal:diffuse areas of multiple stenoses and dilatations | May be normalSingle or multiple abnormalities(cut-offs, lumen irregularities, avascular mass lesion) | |
| Normal | Vasculitis | |
Except when complicated by stroke, intraparenchymal or cortical subarachnoid hemorrhage or posterior reversible leukoencephalopathy.
Angiographic abnormalities are required for diagnosis but must be reversible in 6-12 weeks.
Primary Systemic Vasculitis Most Frequently Involving the CNS in Adults
| Wegener’s granulomatosis |
| Microscopic polyangiitis |
| Churg-Strauss syndrome |
| Cryoglobulinemic |
| vasculitis |
| Behçet’s disease |
| Polyarteritis nodosa |
| Giant-cell arteritis |
| Takayasu’s arteritis( |
In children, Henoch-Shönlein purpura
and Kawasaki disease
may occasionally involve the CNS
Neurologic complications in Takayasu’s arteritis are mainly due to involvement of extacranial vessels.