| Literature DB >> 23008735 |
Ludovico Iannetti1, Roberta Zito, Simone Bruschi, Laura Papetti, Fiorenza Ulgiati, Francesco Nicita, Francesca Del Balzo, Alberto Spalice.
Abstract
Central nervous system vasculitides in children may develop as a primary condition or secondary to an underlying systemic disease. Many vasculitides affect both adults and children, while some others occur almost exclusively in childhood. Patients usually present with systemic symptoms with single or multiorgan dysfunction. The involvement of central nervous system in childhood is not frequent and it occurs more often as a feature of subtypes like childhood polyarteritis nodosa, Kawasaki disease, Henoch Schönlein purpura, and Bechet disease. Primary angiitis of the central nervous system of childhood is a reversible cause of severe neurological impairment, including acute ischemic stroke, intractable seizures, and cognitive decline. The first line therapy of CNS vasculitides is mainly based on corticosteroids and immunosuppressor drugs. Other strategies include plasmapheresis, immunoglobulins, and biologic drugs. This paper discusses on current understanding of most frequent primary and secondary central nervous system vasculitides in children including a tailored-diagnostic approach and new evidence regarding treatment.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23008735 PMCID: PMC3447380 DOI: 10.1155/2012/698327
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Dev Immunol ISSN: 1740-2522
Causes of secondary central nervous system vasculitis in children [1].
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Infections | Viral: varicella, HIV, hepatitis C |
| Bacterial: Lyme disease, tuberculosis | |
| Fungal | |
| Parasitic | |
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| Systemic vasculitis | Kawasaki disease |
| Henoch-Schönlein purpura | |
| Polyarteritis nodosa | |
| Wegener granulomatosis | |
| Microscopic polyarteritis nodosa | |
| Takayasu arteritis | |
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| Systemic connective tissue diseases | Systemic lupus erythematosus |
| Dermatomyositis | |
| Sjogren syndrome | |
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| Inflammatory bowel diseases | |
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| Sarcoidosis | |
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| Vascular injury | Dissection |
| Radiation | |
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Drugs | Amphetamines |
| Contraceptives | |
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| Neoplasms | |
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| Graft versus host diseases | |
New classification of childhood vasculitis [2].
| Predominantly large vessel vasculitis | Takayasu arteritis |
|---|---|
| Predominantly medium-sized vessel vasculitis | Childhood polyarteritis nodosa |
| Cutaneous polyarteritis | |
| Kawasaki disease | |
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| Predominantly small vessels vasculitis | (A) Granulomatous: |
| Wegener's granulomatosis | |
| Churg-Strauss syndrome | |
| (B) Nongranulomatous: | |
| Microscopic polyangiitis | |
| Henoch-Schönlein purpura | |
| Isolated cutaneous leucocytoclastic vasculitis | |
| Hypocomplementic urticarial vasculitis | |
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| Other vasculitis | Behcet disease |
| Vasculitis secondary to infection (including hepatitis B associated polyarteritis nodosa), malignancies, and drugs, including hypersensitivity vasculitis | |
| Vasculitis associated with connective tissue diseases | |
| Isolated vasculitis of the central nervous system | |
| Cogan syndrome | |
| Unclassified | |
Differential diagnosis of CNS vasculitides in children.
| Infectous disease | Viral/bacterial encephalitis |
| Viral/bacterial menigitidis | |
| Viral/bacterial sepsi | |
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| Metabolic disease | Mitochondrial disease |
| Amino acid disorders | |
| Organic acidemias | |
| Urea cycle disorders | |
| Fatty acid oxidation disorders | |
| Fabry disease | |
| Homocystinuria | |
| Leukodystrophies | |
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| Demyelinating diseases | Multiple sclerosis |
| Acute-disseminated encephalomyelitis | |
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| Thromboembolic diseases | Antiphospholipid syndrome |
| Hypercoagulability states | |
| Cholesterol embolisms | |
| Cardiac myxoma | |
| Nonbacterial thrombotic endocarditis | |
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| Malignancies | Multifocal glioma |
| CNS lymphoma | |
| Angiocentric lymphoma | |
| Intravascular lymphoma (malignant angioendotheliomatosis) | |
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| Autoimmune disease | Celiac disease |
| Hashimoto's encephalitis | |
| Sarcoidosis | |
| Systemic lupus erythematosus | |
| Neuronal antibody associated (NMDA-receptor associated encephalitis) | |
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| Vascular | Arterial dissection |
| Fibromuscular dysplasia | |
| Moyamoya disease | |
| Vasospastic disorders | |
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| Nutritional | Vitamin B12 deficiency |
Figure 1MRI Axial T2-Flair image. A six-years girl with HSP complicated by PRESS. Bilateral hyperintense lesions of subcortical white matter in the occipital region.