Introduction
Vasculitis is a broad category that refers to inflammation in blood vessels. It is frequently brought on by the body’s immune system, but the reason why the body decides to attack its own blood vessels is not known.
There are many conditions that can lead to vasculitis. Rheumatologists are the medical specialty that diagnose and manage vasculitis, which often medicine that blocks immune system overactivity
Vascular surgeons are involved when the arteries develop problems that require surgical correction, or when the diagnosis of vasculitis requires a sample of an artery to be looked at under a microscope.
Different forms of vasculitis
Vascular surgeons generally divide vasculitis into three kinds
Some kinds of vasculitis can affect all three sizes.
Presentation features of vasculitis
Large vessel vasculitis
Medium sized vessel vasculitis
Small vessel vasculitis
Large vessel vasculitis
The large vessel vasculitis tends to affect the big artery that comes off of the heart, the aorta. The most common kind of large vessel vasculitis is giant cell arteritis, or temporal arteritis. Diagnosis of this condition is achieved through:
Symptoms of temporal arteritis (giant cell arteritis)
Temporal artery biopsy
Biopsy is typically performed in the operating theatre, under either general or local anaesthetic. The artery is marked using an ultrasound and a cut is made behind the hairline, in front of and above the ear. A segment of artery is removed and it is looked at under a microscopy. This is the only way to be sure if you have this condition.
Your doctor will often commence treatment with steroids before the biopsy is done. This is to prevent the condition from causing permanent damage, such as blindness. To ensure it is safe to come off the steroids, you will need a biopsy proving there is no inflammation affecting the artery.
Small vessel vasculitis
There are multiple named conditions that are considered small vessel vasculitis. They fall into two broad categories, based on the presence of a particular antibody*
*Note: ‘antibody’ are immune molecules that your body produces, which are the body’s immune soldiers that wage war against whatever they think is the enemy)
Categories of small vessel vasculitis and the named conditions that fall into each include:
What does small vessel vasculitis do to the body?
Small vessel vasculitis, as the name suggests, affect small blood vessels. This demonstrates itself most commonly in three locations
Conclusions
Vasculitis is a serious medical condition, with many different types and effects on the body. It needs to be managed by a general practitioner in combination with a rheumatologist, sometimes a kidney specialist, sometimes a lung specialist and sometimes a vascular surgeon.