Survival was worse in male patients with diffuse SSc, and lung and heart involvement represented the main causes of death in this South American series of patients with SSc.
In this series, patients with ssSSc had a relatively mild disease with good prognosis.
The objective of this study is to describe the characteristics of patients with Erasmus syndrome (ES) in a large SSc Brazilian cohort. Nine hundred and forty-seven SSc patients attended at the Scleroderma Outpatient Clinic at two academic medical centers in Brazil and classified as SSc according to the ACR/EULAR criteria were retrospectively studied. Information on demographics, clinical, and laboratory features was obtained by chart review. ES patients had their HLA class II characterized by PCR-SSO method as available. Among the 947 SSc patients studied, nine (0.9 %) had ES. These ES patients were predominantly male (78 %) and smokers (68 %) and presented diffuse SSc (67 %). Mean time of occupational exposure to silica was 13.7 years, with mean age at onset of 47 years. Previous history of tuberculosis was referred by 33 % of the ES patients. All the ES patients presented Raynaud's phenomenon, esophageal involvement, and interstitial lung disease (ILD). Antinuclear antibodies were present in all the ES patients, while anti-topoisomerase I was positive in 44 % and no patient had anticentromere antibody. Three different HLA-DQB alleles (0506, 0305, and 0303) were observed. Compared to non-ES cases, patients with ES were associated with male gender (p < 0.001), diffuse SSc (p < 0.05), ILD (p < 0.05), positive anti-topoisomerase I antibodies (p < 0.05), and death (p < 0.05). Multivariate analysis did not confirm that silicosis is an independent risk factor for SSc. To conclude, ES was rare in this large SSc cohort, although associated with a bad prognosis.
A 43-year-old woman reported pain in the right hypochondrium, which had started 3 years before and had been worsening for the past few days. Claudication in the superior and inferior limbs, diffuse myalgia, dyspnea, precordialgia followed by dizziness and visual turbidity were added to the clinical picture. In the physical examination bilateral carotid bruit was observed, abdominal aorta murmur and the decrease of the right radial and left pedis pulses and arterial hypertension with difference in the diastolic pressure between limbs >10 mmHg was also observed. On cardiac catheterisation with aortography, right coronary with proximal parietal irregularities, slight pressure increase in right chambers and pulmonary artery, preserved left ventricle contractility, competent valves, carotid and subclavian partial obstruction, severe narrowing of the abdominal aorta below the diaphragm (80%) and right renal artery significant stenosis were observed. Takayasu's arteritis (TA) diagnosis was established according to the ACR criteria based on the clinical symptomatology, on physical and image test findings. Two years later she presented malar rash, photosensitivity, nephropathy, leukopenia, lymphopenia and hemolytic anemia confirming the systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) diagnosis. TA coexisting with SLE has rarely been reported.
To characterize the clinical and laboratory profile of juvenile-onset compared to adult-onset systemic sclerosis in a large Brazilian cohort. Methods: Retrospective analysis of a cohort of 1016 systemic sclerosis patients followed at the Scleroderma Outpatient Clinic from two referral university centers in Brazil. Patients were classified as systemic sclerosis according to the 1980 American College of Rhaumatology (ACR) criteria. Juvenile-onset systemic sclerosis was defined if age at onset was <16 years. Results: Thirty-one (3.1%) patients were classified as juvenile-onset systemic sclerosis. These patients were predominantly females (90.3%), Caucasians (71.0%), and presented diffuse systemic sclerosis (51.6%), with mean age at onset of 12.71 years. Compared to the adult-onset patients, juvenile onset was associated with diffuse systemic sclerosis (p < 0.001), calcinosis (p < 0.001), myositis (p = 0.050), and lower frequency of interstitial lung disease (p = 0.050), pulmonary hypertension (p = 0.035), and esophageal (p = 0.005) involvement. Conclusion: Juvenile-onset systemic sclerosis characterized a distinct clinical pattern in this large series of systemic sclerosis patients, since it was predominantly associated with diffuse systemic sclerosis without significant organ involvement.
Objectives. The aim of this study was to evaluate human leukocyte antigen (HLA) involvement in the disease expression and poor prognostic clinical features (pulmonary fibrosis and pulmonary arterial hypertension) in patients diagnosed with systemic sclerosis (SSc) in a multiethnic population. Methods. SSc patients followed up between 2008 and 2011 were included, and clinical data were obtained through records review. Molecular HLA typing was performed (polymerase chain reaction amplification technique using specific primer sequences). The statistical analysis involved Fisher's exact test and Pearson's corrected chi-square test. P values ≤ 0.05 were considered significant. The delta method was used to estimate the variance of the prevalence ratio (PR). Results. A total of 141 patients (120 women and 21 men) with SSc were studied, including 33.3% with diffuse cutaneous SSc (dcSSc), 62.4% with limited cutaneous SSc (lcSSc), and 4.3% with sine scleroderma. Pulmonary fibrosis was present in 61 patients (43.3%), and the HLA-A∗30 and DQB1∗04 alleles were related to susceptibility. In contrast, the HLA-DRB1∗01 and DQB1∗05 alleles were protective. Pulmonary arterial hypertension was diagnosed in 19 patients (13.5%) and was associated with HLA-B∗35 and C∗04; in contrast, C∗03 seemed to be protective. Conclusions. Our current study documents the association of some classes I and II HLA alleles with the most severe clinical manifestations in a multiethnic case series. Our findings differed slightly from the previous data in other populations.
BACKGROUNDFungal osteomyelitis is a rare pathology with the most commonly reported etiologic agents being the Candida spp. and Aspergillus genera. Its incidence is higher in immunocompromised patients, using permanent central venous catheters, and using broad-spectrum antibiotics or injecting drug users. Sometimes, diagnosis is delayed for weeks to months because of the difficulty of isolation and slow growth of the pathogen on culture media. The following is a report of a fatal development of the condition. CASE REPORTA 49-year-old female patient, being followed-up in rheumatology for overlapping diseases: limited cutaneous systemic sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis and Sjögren's syndrome, under use of prednisone 5 mg/day and monthly tocilizumab due to joint and lung conditions. The patient evolved with a report of a periungual lesion in the third left finger. Magnetic resonance imaging of the hand was performed, which showed acrosteolysis of the third finger, followed by skin irregularity, subcutaneous edema and intense osteitis of the remaining distal phalanx and subchondral/medial diaphysis of the intermediate phalanx-images compatible with a possible infectious process on the bone and distal interphalangeal joint. Endovenous antimicrobial treatment was initiated and disarticulation was proposed. The patient refused, and only surgical cleaning and collection of material for cultures were performed. Despite multiple antimicrobial regimens, the patient gradually worsened and died due to disseminated intravascular coagulation. One day after her death, there was growth of Candida albicans in culture, as well as pathogen growth in pathology. CONCLUSIONThe rheumatologist should be aware of the possibility of fungal osteomyelitis, especially in immunosuppressed patients and in the absence of response to conventional antimicrobial therapy.
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