Title: RENAL
1RENAL CARDIAC MANIFESTATIONS OF SLE
- Suhail Allaqaband, MD
- University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Clinical Campus
- Sinai Samaritan Medical center
- Milwaukee, WI
2Systemic lupus erythematosus
- Patients with SLE are subject to a variety of
symptoms, complaints, and inflammatory
involvement that can affect virtually every organ
- The most common pattern is a mixture of
constitutional complaints with skin,
musculoskeletal, mild hematologic, and serologic
involvement
3CLINICAL CRITERIA FOR DIAGNOSIS
- Most physicians rely on the ARA revised Criteria
for the Classification of SLE - The diagnosis of SLE is made if four or more of
the manifestations are present, either serially
or simultaneously - When tested against other rheumatic diseases,
these criteria have a sensitivity and specificity
of approximately 96 percent
4- ARA Criteria for diagnosis of Systemic Lupus
Erythematosus - criterion definition
- malar rash fixed erythema, flap or raised, over
the mainandevidence
5AUTOANTIBODIES
- The ANA test is the best screening test for SLE
and should be performed whenever SLE is suspected
- The ANA is positive in significant titer (usually
1160 or higher) in virtually all patients with
SLE
6AUTOANTIBODIES
- dsDNA and Sm antibodies
- There are two autoantibodies that are highly
specific for SLE - anti-double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) antibodies
- anti-Sm antibodies
- Sensitivity 66 to 95 percent
- Specificity 75 to 100 percent
- Predictive value 89 to 100 percent
7Renal manifestations of SLE
- Renal involvement is common in SLE
- An abnormal urinalysis is present in
approximately 50 of patients at the time of
diagnosis and eventually develops in more than 75
percent of cases - The most frequently observed abnormality is
proteinuria (80 percent) while approximately 40
percent have hematuria and/or pyuria sometime
during the course of their illness
8Renal manifestations of SLE
- The total incidence of renal involvement among
patients with SLE probably exceeds 90 percent
since renal biopsy in patients without any
clinical evidence of renal disease often reveals
a focal or diffuse proliferative
glomerulonephritis - There are a number of different types of renal
disease in SLE, with immune complex-mediated
glomerular diseases being most common
9IMMUNE COMPLEX GLOMERULAR DISEASE
- Most patients with lupus nephritis have an immune
complex-mediated glomerular disease - The standard classification divides these
disorders into five different patterns in which
(type I) represents no disease - Mesangial (type II)
- Focal proliferative (type III)
- Diffuse proliferative (type IV)
- Membranous (type V)
10Mesangial lupus nephritis (type II)
- Occurs in 10 to 20 of cases and represents the
earliest and mildest form of glomerular
involvement - Presents clinically as microscopic hematuria
and/or proteinuria hypertension is uncommon, and
the nephrotic syndrome and renal insufficiency
are virtually never seen - The renal prognosis is excellent and no specific
therapy is indicated unless the patient
progresses to more advanced disease
11- Mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis.
Light micrograph of a mesangial
glomerulonephritis showing segmental areas of
increased mesangial matrix and cellularity
(arrows). This finding alone can be seen in many
diseases, including lupus nephritis and IgA
nephropathy.
12Focal proliferative lupus nephritis (type III)
- Occurs in 10 to 20 of cases, but represents more
advanced involvement than mesangial disease - Hematuria and proteinuria are seen in almost all
patients, some of whom also have the nephrotic
syndrome, hypertension, and an elevated plasma
creatinine concentration - By definition, less than 50 percent of glomeruli
are affected on light microscopy - Electron microscopy shows immune deposits in the
subendothelial space of the glomerular capillary
wall as well as the mesangium -
13Focal proliferative lupus nephritis (type III)
- The renal prognosis in focal proliferative lupus
nephritis is variable - Progressive renal dysfunction appears to be
uncommon when less than 25 percent of the
glomeruli are affected on light microscopy - On the other hand, more widespread or severe
involvement (40 to 50 percent of glomeruli
affected, nephrotic range proteinuria, and/or
hypertension) has a long-term prognosis that is
similar to that of diffuse disease
14- Memberanoproliferative lupus nephritis. Light
micrograph showing a memberanoproliferative
pattern in lupus nephritis, characterized by
areas of cellular proliferation (long arrows) and
by thickening of the glomerular capillary wall
(due to immune deposits) that may be prominent
enough to form a wire-loop (short arrows).
Although proliferative changes can be focal
(affecting less than 50 of glomeruli), disease
ofthis severity is usually diffuse.
15Diffuse proliferative lupus nephritis (type IV)
- The most common and most severe form of lupus
nephritis affecting 40 to 60 of cases - Hematuria and proteinuria are seen in almost all
cases, and the nephrotic syndrome, hypertension,
and renal insufficiency are all frequently seen - Affected patients typically have significant
hypocomplementemia and elevated anti-DNA levels,
especially during active disease - Immunosuppressive therapy is generally required
to prevent progression of active diffuse
proliferative lupus nephritis to ESRD
16 Diffuse proliferative lupus nephritis. Kidney
biopsy from a patient with diffuse proliferative
lupus nephritis showing, on immunofluorescence
microscopy, massive lumpy bumpy deposits of IgG.
17Membranous lupus (type V)
- Affects 10 to 20 percent of patients
- Patients typically present with nephrotic
syndrome - Microscopic hematuria and hypertension also may
be seen at presentation, and the plasma
creatinine concentration is usually normal or
slightly elevated - Membranous lupus is the one form of lupus
nephritis that may present with no other clinical
or serologic manifestations of SLE - Most patients maintain a normal or near normal
plasma creatinine concentration for five years or
more and may not require immunosuppressive therapy
18 Membranous lupus nephritis. Light micrograph of
membranous lupus nephritis. The changes are
similar to those in any form of membranous
nephropathy with diffuse thickening of the
glomerular capillary wall being the major
abnormality (short arrows). Focal areas of
mesangial expansion and hypercellularity (long
arrows) are the only findings suggestive of an
underlying disease such as lupus, although they
can also be seen in idiopathic membranous
nephropathy.
19 Membranous lupus nephritis. Electron micrograph
of membranous lupus nephritis. The subepithelial
immune deposits (D) are characteristic of any
form of membranous nephropathy, but the
intraendothelial tubuloreticular structures
(arrow) strongly suggest underlying lupus. GBM
glomerular basement membrane EP epithelial
cell.
20Other Renal manifestations of SLE
- In addition to these glomerulopathies, there are
three other less common forms of lupus renal
disease - interstitial nephritis
- vascular disease and
- renal disease infrequently associated with
drug-induced lupus
21Tubulointerstitial nephritis
- Tubulointerstitial disease (interstitial
infiltrate, tubular injury) is a common finding
in lupus nephritis, almost always being seen with
concurrent glomerular disease - The severity of the tubulointerstitial
involvement is an important prognostic sign,
correlating positively with the presence of
hypertension, an elevated plasma creatinine
concentration, and a progressive course
22Vascular disease
- Involvement of the renal vasculature is not
uncommon in lupus nephritis and its presence can
adversely affect the prognosis of the renal
disease - The most common problems are immune complex
deposition, immunoglobulin microvascular casts, a
thrombotic microangiopathy leading to a syndrome
similar to TTP, and vasculitis - Vascular immune deposits typically produce no
inflammation, but fibrinoid necrosis with
vascular narrowing can be seen in severe cases
23Vascular disease
- Other patients present with glomerular and
vascular thrombi, often in association with
antiphospholipid antibodies - Renal involvement is characterized by fibrin
thrombi in the small arteries and glomerular
capillaries and, in some cases, in the larger
renal artery branches - These changes may occur as a primary disease or
may be superimposed upon one of the immune
complex forms of lupus nephritis - Rarely, patients with lupus nephritis develop
renal vein thrombosis
24Drug-induced lupus
- A variety of drugs can induce a lupus-like
syndrome, particularly those that are acetylated
in the liver, such as hydralazine, procainamide,
and less often isoniazid - Renal involvement is uncommon but a
proliferative glomerulonephritis or the nephrotic
syndrome can occur
25Cardiac manifestations of SLE
- Cardiac disease is common among patients with SLE
as pericardial, myocardial, valvular, and
coronary artery involvement can occur - The incidence of these problems can be summarized
as follows - Cardiac abnormalities up to 55 percent
- Valvular disease up to 50 percent
- Pericardial disease, usually a clinically silent
effusion up to 48 percent - Myocardial dysfunction up to 78 percent
26VALVULAR DISEASE
- Systolic murmurs have been noted in 16 to 44
percent of patients - Structural valvular disease is most common but
anemia, fever, tachycardia, and cardiomegaly can
induce functional murmurs - Diastolic murmurs have been noted in one to three
percent of patients - They often reflect aortic insufficiency, which
occasionally requires valve replacement.
27VALVULAR DISEASE
- Mitral valve involvement is most common a mild
to moderate regurgitant murmur may be heard but
most patients remain asymptomatic - Mitral valve prolapse appears to occur with
increased frequency in lupus, occurring in 25
percent of cases
28Verrucous endocarditis
- Libman-Sacks endocarditis is a not uncommon
complication of SLE - In one report of 74 patients, seven had verrucous
lesions detected by TTE - However, a higher frequency (43 percent) has been
noted when more sensitive TEE is performed - In addition, Libman-Sacks endocarditis is often
associated with antiphospholipid antibodies - Verrucous endocarditis is typically asymptomatic
- However, the verrucae can fragment and produce
systemic emboli
29PERICARDIAL DISEASE
- Pericardial involvement is the second most common
echocardiographic lesion in SLE, and is the most
frequent cause of symptomatic cardiac disease - Pericardial effusion occurs at some point in over
one-half of patients, and a benign pericarditis
may precede the clinical signs of lupus - Pericardial disease is usually asymptomatic, and
is generally diagnosed by echocardiography
performed for some other reason
30PERICARDIAL DISEASE
- Symptomatic pericarditis typically presents with
positional substernal chest pain with an audible
rub on auscultation - The pericardial fluid is a fibrinous exudate or
transudate that may contain antinuclear
antibodies, LE cells, low complement levels, and
immune complexes - The pericardium may reveal foci of inflammatory
lesions with immune complexes
31PERICARDIAL DISEASE
- The course is benign in the large majority of
patients with pericardial disease - Symptomatic pericarditis often responds to an
NSAID, especially indomethacin - Patients who do not tolerate or respond to an
NSAID can be treated with prednisone - The most serious consequence is the development
of purulent pericarditis in the immunosuppressed,
debilitated patient - Large effusions, suggestive of tamponade, and
constrictive pericarditis are rare in SLE
32MYOCARDITIS
- Myocarditis is an uncommon, often asymptomatic
manifestation of SLE with a prevalence of 8 to
25 - It should be suspected if there is resting
tachycardia disproportionate to body temp., EKG
abnormalities and unexplained cardiomegaly - Echocardiography may reveal abnormalities in both
systolic and diastolic function of the left
ventricle - Acute myocarditis may accompany other
manifestations of acute SLE, particularly
pericarditis - Myocarditis should be treated with prednisone
plus usual therapy for congestive heart failure
if present
33CONDUCTION ABNORMALITIES
- Conduction defects, which may represent a sequel
of active or past pericarditis and/or myocarditis
have been noted in 34 to 70 percent of patients
with SLE - Congenital heart block may be part of the
neonatal lupus syndrome - Many mothers of these infants have either SLE or
Sjögren's syndrome, antibodies to Ro (SS-A)
and/or La (SS-B), and are HLA-DR3 positive - The anti-Ro and anti-La antibodies may induce
autoimmune injury that prevents normal
development of the conduction fibers - It is recommended that anti-Ro antibody titers be
measured early in pregnancy in women with SLE
34CORONARY ARTERY DISEASE
- Coronary artery disease has been recognized in 2
to 16 of patients with SLE and can lead to acute
myocardial infarction in young women - Coronary disease, leading to angina, myocardial
infarction, congestive heart failure, and death,
is becoming an increasing problem, particularly
in the young patient with long-standing SLE
maintained on corticosteroids - In one report, coronary disease (defined as
angina, myocardial infarction, or sudden death)
occurred in 8.3 percent of 229 patients and was
responsible for 3 of 10 deaths
35CORONARY ARTERY DISEASE
- Patients with SLE should be made aware of the
importance of risk factor reduction - Patients with lupus should be advised to stop
smoking, exercise, consider the use of hormone
replacement therapy, and follow measures designed
to improve lipid profiles - Hydroxychloroquine should be used in preference
to prednisone whenever possible and aspirin
should be prescribed for its antiplatelet
properties - Symptomatic coronary artery disease should be
treated as in patients without lupus
36VENOUS THROMBOSIS
- Thrombophlebitis has been reported in
approximately 10 percent of patients with SLE - It generally involves the lower extremity, but
can also affect the renal veins and inferior vena
cava - Risk factors for venous thrombosis include
antiphospholipid antibodies and the use of oral
contraceptives, particularly in association with
smoking cigarettes