Vasculitis: Classification & Pathogenesis - Vessel Vandals Intro
- Definition: "Vessel Vandals" - inflammation & damage to blood vessel walls (arteries, veins, capillaries), leading to tissue ischemia, organ damage, necrosis, or hemorrhage.
- Pathogenesis: Primarily immune-mediated mechanisms:
- Immune complex deposition (Type III Hypersensitivity).
- ANCA (Anti-Neutrophil Cytoplasmic Antibodies) targeting PR3 (c-ANCA) or MPO (p-ANCA).
- Anti-Endothelial Cell Antibodies (AECA).
- Autoreactive T-cells (granulomatous inflammation).
- Less commonly: direct pathogen invasion.
- Classification (Dominant vessel size - CHCC 2012):

⭐ Systemic symptoms (fever, myalgia, arthralgia, malaise, weight loss) are common across many vasculitides.
Large Vessel Vasculitis: GCA & Takayasu - Aorta's Agony
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Giant Cell Arteritis (GCA)
- Age >50 yrs. Affects temporal, ophthalmic arteries.
- Sx: Headache, jaw claudication, visual loss, Polymyalgia Rheumatica (PMR).
- Dx: ↑ ESR (>50 mm/hr), temporal artery biopsy (granulomas, giant cells).
- Rx: Urgent high-dose steroids (prednisone 40-60 mg).

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Takayasu Arteritis
- Age <40-50 yrs (young Asian women). "Pulseless disease".
- Sx: ↓Pulses (BP diff >10 mmHg btw arms), claudication, bruits. Aortic arch syndrome.
- Dx: ↑ ESR, angiography (CT/MR) shows stenosis/thickening.
- Rx: Corticosteroids.
- 📌 TakaYAsu: Young Asian.
⭐ GCA: Risk of irreversible blindness mandates immediate high-dose steroid therapy if suspected (e.g., new headache, visual sx, jaw claudication in elderly).
Medium Vessel Vasculitis: PAN & Kawasaki - Artery Afflictions
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Polyarteritis Nodosa (PAN)
- Necrotizing vasculitis of medium-sized arteries; spares pulmonary circulation.
- Associated with Hepatitis B (HBsAg) in ~30% cases.
- Clinical: Fever, weight loss, myalgia, abdominal pain (mesenteric ischemia), hypertension (renal artery involvement), mononeuritis multiplex.
- Pathology: Transmural inflammation, fibrinoid necrosis, "beads-on-a-string" appearance on angiography.
- 📌 Mnemonic: Pulmonary Artery Not involved.
-
Kawasaki Disease (Mucocutaneous Lymph Node Syndrome)
- Typically affects children < 5 years.
- Clinical: Fever >5 days, conjunctivitis, rash, adenopathy, strawberry tongue, hand-foot changes (edema, erythema, desquamation).
- Major complication: Coronary artery aneurysms.
- Treatment: IVIG and Aspirin.

⭐ Kawasaki Disease is the leading cause of acquired heart disease in children in developed countries; coronary artery aneurysms are a feared complication, treat with IVIG and high-dose aspirin initially, then low-dose aspirin for thromboprophylaxis.
Small Vessel Vasculitis: ANCA & Immune Complex - Capillary Crisis
Affects capillaries, venules, arterioles. Two types: ANCA-associated (AAV) & Immune Complex-mediated (ICV).
- ANCA-Associated Vasculitis (AAV): Pauci-immune (scant/no immune deposits).
- Microscopic Polyangiitis (MPA): p-ANCA (MPO). Necrotizing GN, pulmonary capillaritis. No granulomas.
- Granulomatosis with Polyangiitis (GPA): c-ANCA (PR3). Triad: URT, LRT (nodules, cavities), renal (RPGN). Necrotizing granulomas. 📌 C-ANCA, Cavities.
- Eosinophilic GPA (EGPA): p-ANCA (MPO) in ~50%. Asthma, ↑eosinophils (>10% or >1500/μL), neuropathy. Eosinophilic granulomas.
- Immune Complex Vasculitis: Immune complex deposition.
- IgA Vasculitis (HSP): Children. Palpable purpura (buttocks, lower limbs), arthralgia, abdominal pain, IgA nephropathy. Post-URI.
- Cryoglobulinemic Vasculitis: HCV-linked. Meltzer's triad: purpura, arthralgia, weakness. Type II/III cryoglobulins.
- Anti-GBM Disease (Goodpasture's): Abs to Type IV collagen (α3). Pulmonary hemorrhage, RPGN. Linear IgG IF.
Capillary Crisis (Pulmonary-Renal Syndrome):
- Diffuse Alveolar Hemorrhage (DAH) + Rapidly Progressive Glomerulonephritis (RPGN). Life-threatening.
- Seen in AAV (MPA, GPA), Anti-GBM disease.
- Rx: High-dose steroids, cyclophosphamide/rituximab, plasmapheresis.

⭐ GPA (Wegener's) is characterized by the triad of upper respiratory tract, lower respiratory tract, and renal involvement, often with c-ANCA (PR3-ANCA) positivity.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Giant Cell Arteritis: Elderly, temporal artery, polymyalgia rheumatica, risk of blindness; prompt steroids.
- Takayasu Arteritis: "Pulseless disease", young females, granulomatous inflammation of aortic arch & branches.
- Kawasaki Disease: Children <5 yrs, coronary artery aneurysms risk; mucocutaneous signs, IVIG + aspirin.
- Polyarteritis Nodosa (PAN): Medium-vessel vasculitis, Hepatitis B link, renal/visceral arteries, spares lungs.
- ANCA-associated: GPA (c-ANCA): URT/LRT/Kidney granulomas; MPA (p-ANCA): Lung/Kidney, no granulomas; EGPA (p-ANCA): Asthma, eosinophilia.
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