0521779407-19 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:21
Sarcoidosis 1319
SARCOIDOSIS
LAURA L. KOTH, MD
history & physical
History
■Elicit occupational or environmental exposures
■Symptoms vary depending on organs involved
■Hallmark of disease: clinically silent organ involvement with almost
50% of patients asymptomatic
■Fever, fatigue, weight loss (30%)
■Lungs involved (90%); dyspnea, dry cough, chest pain (50%)
■Hemoptysis rare
■Airway hyperreactivity (20%)
Signs & Symptoms
■Eyes: uveitis, conjunctivitis
■Eye pain, rashes, or joint pain
■Skin: erythema nodosum, lupus pernio
■Lungs: crackles <20% of patients
■Abdomen: 15–20% with splenomegaly, hepatomegaly
■Extremities: clubbing rare; palpable peripheral lymph nodes in 30%
■Neurologic: facial palsies
Common Presentations:
■Acute:
➣Lofgren’s syndrome (erythema nodosum, uveitis, hilar adenopa-
thy,+/−migratory arthritis)
➣Heerfordt’s syndrome (fever, parotid enlargement, anterior
uveitis, facial nerve palsy)
■Subacute:
➣<2 y duration; often spontaneous remission
■Chronic:
➣>2 y duration; often leads to fibrosis in affected organs
tests
Laboratory
■Basic Blood Tests
➣Peripheral blood counts: WBC, RBC, platelets
➣Serum chemistries: calcium, liver enzymes (AST, ALT, AP) crea-
tinine, BUN