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EP17 Finding the road to sarcoidosis

Abstract Case report - Introduction Sarcoidosis is an autoimmune, multi-system condition in which the formation of non-caseating, granulomas is a key histological feature. Clinical presentation can be variable and may lead to a delay in recognition. Most cases will resolve with minimal or no interve...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Rheumatology advances in practice 2020-11, Vol.4 (Supplement_1)
Main Author: Nizam, Sharmin
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Abstract Case report - Introduction Sarcoidosis is an autoimmune, multi-system condition in which the formation of non-caseating, granulomas is a key histological feature. Clinical presentation can be variable and may lead to a delay in recognition. Most cases will resolve with minimal or no intervention. Awareness of the condition and features helps guide long-term management and as illustrated in cases below, rheumatologists may often be involved in helping diagnose and coordinate the patient pathway. Case report - Case description A 51- year old female ex-smoker experienced 6 months of fatigue, dry cough, mild exertional dyspnoea, sweats, mild weight loss and arthralgia after a cholecystectomy. She described lesions typical of erythema nodosum coinciding with a raised CRP (58g/L) which later normalised. Other than an elevated serum ACE (71 U/L), rest of tests were normal. Plain chest radiograph was normal but a co-incidental CT abdomen for non-specific abdominal discomfort showed small volume abdominal lymphadenopathy. Further imaging showed bilateral mediastinal and hilar lymphadenopathy. Pulmonary function tests and joint ultrasound were normal. EBUS sampling (August 2014) excluded malignancy but confirmed sarcoid granulomas. She briefly required non-steroidals for arthralgia. Four years later, she is still well with resolution of lymphadenopathy. A 41-year old male non-smoker presented with 6 weeks of bilateral heel pain followed by myalgia, weight loss, headaches, sweats, intermittent blurred vision, and a non-specific neck rash. He was afebrile with normal urinalysis, CRPs 24-39 mg/L, CCP, ANCA, ANA negative, (Serum ACE sample insufficient). Infection screening (including TB) was negative. Slit lamp examination was normal. Trans-bronchial sampling of hilar lymphadenopathy seen on imaging excluded lymphoma but showed granulomas typical of sarcoidosis. The patient fully recovered within a few months without medication or recurrence. A 63-year-old female was referred with ankle pain and swelling after 5 months of erythematous leg swelling treated initially as cellulitis. She also had bilateral, intermittent leg cramps and recent intermediate uveitis. She was positive for HLA B27 and ANA (homogenous speckled pattern) with a raised serum ACE (98 U). ANCA was negative, creatinine kinase normal. Background included treated squamous cell carcinoma and degenerative disc disease. Ankle problems had resolved when seen possibly due to prednisolone for uveitis.
ISSN:2514-1775
2514-1775
DOI:10.1093/rap/rkaa052.016