0521779407-C04 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 14, 2007 20:37
446 Cutaneous Vasculitis
differential diagnosis
■Macular purpura can be seen in thrombocytopenia, Rocky Mountain
spotted fever, or hemorrhagic disorders
■Pustules may be seen in infections like disseminated gonorrhea and
bacterial or fungal endocarditis.
■Palpable purpura can be seen in embolic disorders, such as endo-
carditis, cholesterol emboli, and left atrial myxoma.
management
What to Do First
■assess presence of systemic disease, particularly gastrointestinal,
renal, or neurologic
■determine type of vasculitis, based on type of skin lesions, other
clinical findings, laboratory tests
General Measures
■Determine possible precipitating causes, such as drugs or infection,
underlying diseases.
specific therapy
Indications
■Type of therapy is determined by the extent of skin disease, the type
of vasculitis, and involvement of other organs
Treatment Options
■Skin Disease only
➣Mild Disease
Colchicine:Periodically check CBC.
Dapsone:Check G6PD at baseline. Recheck CBC, hepatic func-
tion panel every week as dapsone dose is increased.
Consider combination of Colchicine and dapsone
➣Moderate to severe (extensive skin lesions±systemic involve-
ment)
Prednisone:Short course
Methotrexate: This is especially helpful for cutaneous pol-
yarteritis nodosa.
Azathioprine: Used as glucocorticoid-sparing agent in
patients requiring long-term steroids
Cyclophosphamide:Used as glucocorticoid-sparing agent in
severe disease, certain types of vasculitis (e.g., Wegener’s), and
severe disease refractory to other therapies
Intravenous immunoglobulin:severe disease