0521779407-19 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 6, 2007 17:50
Syphilis Systemic Lupus Erythematosus 1399
early latent cases; may precipitate preterm delivery and fetal distress
in pregnancy
■Prognosis: PCN remains highly effective against T. pallidum; fail-
ure to respond to therapy likely due to reinfection, undiagnosed
neurosyphilis, or non-compliance with alternative treatment re-
gimen
SYSTEMIC LUPUS ERYTHEMATOSUS
JOHN B. WINFIELD, MD
history & physical
Risk Factors
■young women (M:F=1:5), but may occur at any age
■associations: complement deficiencies, MHC class II genes, Fc
receptor genes
■∼10% have affected relatives
■UV light exposure,
■Drugs: procainamide, isoniazid, hydantoins, minocycline, many
others silica dust
■flare during pregnancy or postnatally (20–60%)
Signs & Symptoms
■at onset: constitutional, arthralgia/arthritis, malar rash, alopecia,
Raynaud’s disease, pleuritis, pericarditis, mesangial glomerulone-
phritis (GN)
■established SLE: above plus other rashes (discoid, generalized ery-
thema±photosensitivity) oral/nasal ulcerations, vasculitis, neu-
rologic disease, hematological manifestations, glomerulonephritis
(mesangial, membranous, focal proliferative or diffuse), peritonitis
■less common: bullous rash, myositis, pancreatitis, myocarditis,
endocarditis, pulmonary disease (diffuse interstitial pneumonitis,
hemorrhage, pulmonary hypertension)
tests
Laboratory
■Basic blood studies:
➣CBC: anemia (usually of chronic disease, occasionally hemo-
lytic), lymphopenia, thrombocytopenia
➣ESR: increased
➣BUN/creatinine: increased in renal disease
➣Decreased complement (CH 50 or C3 & C4)