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Mixed Connective Tissue Disease

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Presentation on theme: "Mixed Connective Tissue Disease"— Presentation transcript:

1 Mixed Connective Tissue Disease
SAMIR EL ANSARY ICU PROFESSOR AIN SHAMS CAIRO

2 Global Critical Care https://www. facebook
Global Critical Care Wellcome in our new group Dr.SAMIR EL ANSARY

3 “Mixed Connective Tissue Disease: Still Crazy After All These Years”

4 History 1972 Sharp and colleagues
Identified patients with high levels of antibodies against a ribonucleic protein (RNP) These patients shared several clinical features including Raynaud’s phenomenom, arthralgias, mild arthritis, puffy hands, abnormal esophageal mobility, and myositis Additional findings – hypergammaglobulinemia (80%), anemia and leukopenia (50%); pulmonary, renal and CNS involvement was “rare”

5 History 1980 Nimelstein and colleagues
Doubts after reviewing 22/25 original patients Many patients evolved into scleroderma High mortality rate (8/22) Not everyone had antibodies to RNP Some patients had antibodies without clear clinical features of the syndrome Then, 20 years of contradictory views regarding the existence and nature of MCTD

6 Diagnostic Criteria Features of SLE, systemic sclerosis, RA, and polymyositis Four different diagnostic criteria have been proposed Sharp Kasukawa Alarcon-Segovia Kahn Highest sensitivity (62%) and specificity (86%) with Alarcon-Segovia and Kahn in 45 patients

7 Diagnostic Criteria – Sharp
Major Criteria Myositis Pulmonary Involvement Raynaud phenomenom or esophageal dysmobility Swollen hands or sclerodactyly High anti-U1-RNP with negative anti-Sm Definite – 4 major plus serology Probable – 3 major or 2 major (1st 3 listed) and 2 minor; and serology Minor Criteria Alopecia Leukopenia Anemia Pleuritis Pericarditis Arthritis Trigeminal Neuralgia Malar Rash Thrombocytopenia Mild Myositis h/o swollen hands

8 Diagnostic Criteria Alarcon-Segovia
Clinical Criteria 3/5 (must have synovitis or myositis) Edema of the hands Synovitis Myositis Raynaud’s phenomenon Acrosclerosis Serologic: high titers of anti-U1 RNP

9 Diagnostic Criteria “The crux of the MCTD diagnosis is the presence of high titers of antibodies to U1-RNP.” Many patients who satisfy criteria for MCTD also satisfy ACR criteria for RA or SLE, and many had symptoms of systemic sclerosis. “With serology superseding the clinical symptoms in the diagnosis, there is a risk of fitting the clinical symptoms to the antibody signs”

10 Clinical Presentation
Early Clinical Findings Malaise, easy fatiguability Arthralgias Myalgias Raynaud’s phenomenom Low-grade fevers Unusual Presentations FUO Fever of unknown origin Serositis Trigeminal neuropathy Severe polymyositis Acute arthritis Aseptic meningitis Digital gangrene

11 Characteristic At Diagnosis Cumulative at 5 years Raynaud’s Phenomenom
89% 96% Arthralgia/Arthritis 85% Swollen Hands 60% 66% Esophageal Dysmotility 47% Pulmonary Dysfunction 43% Serositis 34% Hematologic 30% 53% Erythematous Skin Rash Muscle Myositis 28% 51% Pulmonary Hypertension 9% 23% Sclerodermatous Changes 4% 19% CNS (or peripheral) 0% 17% Renal 2% 11%

12 Pulmonary Manifestations
Pleural Effusions Pulmonary Hypertension Pleuritic Pain Intersitial Lung Disease (30-50%) Thromboembolic Disease Obstructive Disease Pulmonary Vasculitis 75% of patients Early Symptoms Dry cough Dyspnea Pleuritic Chest Pain

13 Pericardial Disease Pericardial Involvement MCTD Scleroderma 59%
SLE 44% MCTD 30% RA 24% MCTD At autopsy – 56% had pericardial disease Asymptomatic pericardial effusion – 24-38%

14 Laboratory Findings High titer, speckled ANA pattern
Leukopenia, anemia, thrombocytopenia Elevated ESR Very high serum immunoglobulins Complement levels usually normal or high Rheumatoid Factors increased in 70% of patients Negative findings include anti-dsDNA and anti-Sm antibodies (if positive, some argue that it represents exclusion criteria for MCTD)

15 Antibody Findings Disease ANA RF dsDNA Sm Scl-70 RNP SLE 95-99 20
50-70 30 30-50 RA 15-35 85 <5 10 Diffuse SSc >90 40 MCTD 50 100

16 Follow-Up 39 MCTD patients at 10 year follow-up
64% “differentiated” into another syndrome 11 systemic sclerosis, 10 SLE, 2 RA, 2 overlap syndrome Other studies have found similar results About 40% of patients with anti-U1RNP antibodies retain the diagnosis of MCTD and others are “reclassified” within 5 years of presentation

17 Undifferentiated and Overlap Syndromes
MCTD SLE, SSc, PM, RA Undifferentiated Systemic Rheumatic Disease Undifferentiated connective tissue, collagen, vascular, or autoimmune disease Nonclassical SLE “Atypical” rheumatic disease Undiiferentiated Polyarthritis Syndrome Undifferentiated Spondyloarthritis

18 Undifferentiated and Overlap Syndromes
RA-lupus Rhupus Scleroderma-PM/DM Scleroderma-lupus Scleroderma-PBC-Sjogren’s Scleroderma-RA JRA-lupus Psoriatic arthritis-lupus Psupus Sjogren’s overlaps PM overlaps Raynaud’s phenomenom overlaps

19 SLE Criteria Malar Rash Discoid Rash Photosensitivity Oral Ulcers
Arthritis Serositis Renal Disease Neurologic Disease Hematologic Disease Hemolytic anemia Leukopenia, lymphopenia Immunologic Anti-dsDNA Anti-Sm ANA 4/11 Criteria

20 Global Critical Care https://www. facebook
Global Critical Care Wellcome in our new group Dr.SAMIR EL ANSARY

21 GOOD LUCK SAMIR EL ANSARY ICU PROFESSOR AIN SHAMS CAIRO


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