Vasculitis, Cutaneous
Vasculitis, Cutaneous is the Inflammation of blood vessel walls
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
Primarily type III (immune complex), but type I and type II reactions possible.
SYSTEMS AFFECTED
Skin/Exocrine
Renal/Urologic—some greyhounds
GENETICS
Familial pyogranuloma and vasculitis of Scottish terriers possibly autosomal dominant
Proliferative arteritis in St. Bernards; unknown mode of inheritance
SIGNALMENT
Species
Dog and cat (rare)
Breed Predilections
Any age breed or sex may be affected.
SIGNS
Historical Findings
Anorexia, depression, pyrexia possible
Physical Examination Findings
Focal alopecia with scarring and scaling (especially vaccine-induced/lesions over location of vaccination).
Necrosis and punctate ulcers, palpable purpura, hemorrhagic bullae or urticaria.
Acrocyanosis.
Extremities (paws, pinnae, lips, tail, and oral mucosa) may be painful.
Pitting edema of the extremities, polyarthropathy, and myopathy possible.
CAUSES
Idiopathic
Drug-induced
Vaccine-induced
Adverse food reaction
Tick-borne diseases (e.g., Rickettsia rickettsii)
Infectious
Underlying metabolic process (e.g., diabetes)
Auto-immune
Neoplasia
DIAGNOSIS
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
Deep pyoderma
Ear margin seborrhea
Chemical and thermal burn
Hypersentitivity reaction
Dermatomyositis
Cryoglobulinemia
Toxic epidermal necrolysis
Erythema multiforme
Eosinophilic dermatitis
Systemic lupus erythematosus
Bullous pemphigoid
Pemphigus vulgaris
Sepsis
CBC/BIOCHEMISTRY/URINALYSIS
Normal unless due to underlying metabolic process or infection.
OTHER LABORATORY TESTS
Serologic testing for parasitic and infectious disease in high-risk areas.
Immunodiagnostics—ANA titer, Coombs’ test, and cold agglutinin tests.
DIAGNOSTIC PROCEDURES
Skin scrapings—demodicosis.
Biopsy of early lesion—submit to a dermatopathologist; findings depend on the underlying cause but usually include neutrophilic (leukocytoclastic/non-leukocytoclastic), lymphocytic, eosinophilic, or granulomatous mixed cells in and around the vessels; vascular necrosis and fibrin thrombi may be prominent; perivascular hemorrhage and edema may occur.
Representative cultures (e.g., blood, urine, skin) if suspicious of infectious issues.
Titers for rickettsial infections.
Immunoassay for fungal organisms.
PATHOLOGIC FINDINGS
May vary according with stage and etiology.
Intramural inflammation of vessels, endothelial cell swelling, pale collagen, faded hair follicles, hemorrhage, and edema of surrounding tissue.
TREATMENT
APPROPRIATE HEALTH CARE
Underlying disease—first priority in clinical management.
No systemic abnormalities—treat as outpatient.
Systemic disease—inpatient care recommended.
NURSING CARE
Adequate wound care may be necessary for cases with severe and extensive ulceration.
ACTIVITY
No limitation unless infectious agent suspected.
Isolate if contagious or zoonotic agent suspected.
CLIENT EDUCATION
Inform client that the prognosis is guarded until a cause is found.
SURGICAL CONSIDERATIONS
Individual (focal) lesions may be surgically excised. Otherwise, dependent on underlying etiology.
MEDICATIONS
DRUG(S) OF CHOICE
The underlying disease process should be identified and appropriately treated; if drugs or drug-like substances are suspected, they should be discontinued.
First-line therapy while awaiting histopathology results, if no drug reaction is suspected—antibiotics.
Immune-mediated disease with concurrent vasculitis—prednisolone (0.5–4 mg/kg q24h and taper according to response).
Pentoxifylline 10–20 mg/kg PO q8h.
Cyclosporine may be considered.
Tetracycline and niacinamide each 500 mg q8h for dogs > 10 kg or 250 mg PO q8h for dogs < 10 kg or doxycycline 5 mg/kg PO q12h with niacinamide as with tetracycline.
PRECAUTIONS
Do not use any medications suspected of causing hypersensitivity.
Do not administer tetracycline/doxycycline to pregnant or young animals.
PATIENT MONITORING
Monitor appropriately during treatment of specific etiology.
Pentoxifylline—may decrease blood pressure; may cause excitation; monitor blood pressure if concerned.
Doxycycline or tetracycline—possible increased liver enzymes, possible esophageal strictures in cats (doxycycline); monitor liver chemistries.
Patients receiving prednisolone, azathioprine, chlorambucil, sulfasalazine, or dapsone—monitor appropriately with CBC, chemistry screen, and urinalysis.
Sulfasalazine or dapsone—may decrease tear formation; Schirmer tear test every 2 weeks initially and then routinely.
Immuno-suppressive therapies should be reduced to the lowest possible therapeutic dose.
POSSIBLE COMPLICATIONS
Sepsis and death from primary cause and/or sequelae if severe.
EXPECTED COURSE AND PROGNOSIS
If no underlying disease is found, vasculitis may be difficult to treat and the prognosis is guarded.
MISCELLANEOUS
PREGNANCY/FERTILITY/BREEDING
Corticosteroids, sulfasalazine, tetracycline/doxycycline, and dapsone—do not use in pregnant animals.
All drugs should be used with caution in pregnant and breeding animals.
ABBREVIATION
ANA = antinuclear antibody
Visit your veterinarian as early recognition, diagnosis, and treatment are essential.