Summary:We compared the clinical and serological characteristics of 15 patients with onset of systemic lupus erythematosus after the age of 50 with those of 232 younger patients. The sex distribution was similar in both groups. All 15 patients were Caucasian. Autoimmune thyroiditis was found in 20% of the elderly patients. Initial manifestations, which presented more frequently in the older group, included thrombocytopenia (P< 0.05), sicca syndrome (P< 0.01) and cardiomyopathy (P< 0.005), whereas butterfly rash (P < 0.05) presented more frequently in the younger group. Analysis of cumulative clinical symptoms showed that butterfly rash (P < 0.05) and livedo reticularis (P < 0.05) were less frequent in the elderly. However, this group presented a significantly increased incidence of sicca syndrome (P < 0.005) and cardiomyopathy (P < 0.005). Antibodies to double-stranded DNA tended to occur less frequently in older patients (P < 0.05).
We analysed the clinical and laboratory features of 16 males in comparison with 231 females from a series of 247 unselected patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). There was no significant difference between male and female patients with regard to age at onset and age at diagnosis. Apart from serositis, which was found to occur at a significantly higher frequency in male patients, the incidence of clinical features at disease onset was similar in both sexes. Analysis of clinical findings during the evolution of the disease showed no significant difference between male and female patients. Similarly, no significant immunological difference was found between the two groups. Thus, except for a higher frequency of serositis as the presenting symptom in males, we could not find any notable differences in clinical and serological parameters of male and female patients with SLE.
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