Infection associated Vasculitides

IF 4.8 2区 医学 Q1 RHEUMATOLOGY Best Practice & Research in Clinical Rheumatology Pub Date : 2025-05-01 DOI:10.1016/j.berh.2025.102056
Ramesh Jois, Radhika Bajaj
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Abstract

Infections can mimic Primary Systemic Vasculitis. Many clinical features and investigations maybe very similar between the two conditions. It is very important for the clinician to be aware of the various infections which mimic vasculitis, since inadvertent immunosuppression in these patients can be fatal. Infections can mimic small, medium or large vessel vasculitis. Infections can produce autoantibodies such as Anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody through molecular mimicry and could confound clinical judgement. In addition to the many infections causing vasculitis, more recently COVID-19 associated vasculitis has been described. The exact pathogenesis of infection associated vasculitis is not clear although direct spread, immune complex deposition and T/B cell activation are proposed. Infection as an etiological agent for primary systemic vasculitis has long been debated but definite evidence for the same is lacking. Many drugs used in daily clinical practice can rarely cause vasculitis. More recently Immune-check point inhibitors-induced vasculitis has been described.
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感染相关血管炎。
感染可以模拟原发性全身血管炎。在这两种情况下,许多临床特征和调查可能非常相似。对于临床医生来说,了解各种类似血管炎的感染是非常重要的,因为在这些患者中,无意的免疫抑制可能是致命的。感染可以模拟小、中、大血管炎。感染可通过分子模拟产生抗中性粒细胞胞浆抗体等自身抗体,混淆临床判断。除了引起血管炎的许多感染外,最近还报道了与COVID-19相关的血管炎。感染相关性血管炎的确切发病机制尚不清楚,但提出了直接传播、免疫复合物沉积和T/B细胞活化等机制。感染作为原发性全身性血管炎的病因一直存在争议,但缺乏明确的证据。在日常临床实践中使用的许多药物很少引起血管炎。最近,免疫检查点抑制剂诱导的血管炎已被描述。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
43
审稿时长
27 days
期刊介绍: Evidence-based updates of best clinical practice across the spectrum of musculoskeletal conditions. Best Practice & Research: Clinical Rheumatology keeps the clinician or trainee informed of the latest developments and current recommended practice in the rapidly advancing fields of musculoskeletal conditions and science. The series provides a continuous update of current clinical practice. It is a topical serial publication that covers the spectrum of musculoskeletal conditions in a 4-year cycle. Each topic-based issue contains around 200 pages of practical, evidence-based review articles, which integrate the results from the latest original research with current clinical practice and thinking to provide a continuous update. Each issue follows a problem-orientated approach that focuses on the key questions to be addressed, clearly defining what is known and not known. The review articles seek to address the clinical issues of diagnosis, treatment and patient management. Management is described in practical terms so that it can be applied to the individual patient. The serial is aimed at the physician in both practice and training.
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