Internal Medicine

(Wang) #1

0521779407-08 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:11


650 Granulomatous Vasculitis

follow-up
During Treatment
■Regularly assess disease activity by history & physical exam, includ-
ing bilateral blood pressures & heart exam
➣GCA
After 1 month, taper corticosteroid dose by about 5 mg every 2
weeks to 10–15 mg/day, & more slowly thereafter. Most relapses
occur in the first 18 months of treatment. Average duration of
therapy is about 2–3 years.
➣TA
Therapy may be protracted; one-fourth of pts will require years
of immunosuppression
Subclavian involvement is common (90%), & blood pressure
readings may not reflect aortic root pressure. Angiography &
echocardiography may help
Follow-up vascular imaging required
Surgical intervention for critical stenosis or aneurysms
➣WG, CS
Monitor urinalysis, chest radiograph, clinical status
Long-term immunosuppression is usually required
c-ANCA roughly correlates w/ disease activity

complications & prognosis
■Side effects of high-dose steroids: glaucoma, osteoporosis, infection,
hyperglycemia, hyperlipidemia
■GCA
➣Thoracic aortic aneurysms 17 times, abdominal aneurysms 2.5
times more likely than in age-matched controls
➣Vision loss (6–10%)
➣Stroke
➣Pts w/ GCA have a normal life expectancy
■TA
➣Aortic root involvement w/ valvular insufficiency & congestive
heart failure in 20%
➣Stroke
➣Progressive arterial & aorta lesions may require surgery
➣5-year survival 83%; 10-year survival 58% in pts w/ severe disease
■WS, CS
➣Renal failure, stroke, mononeuritis, vision loss; tracheal stenosis,
nasal deformity, infection
➣5-year survival >80%
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