Vasculitis pathophysiology
Vasculitis |
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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor-In-Chief: M.Umer Tariq [2]
Overview
Pathophysiology
Large vessel vasculitis
- Takayasu arteritis - Primarily affects the aorta and its main branches.
- Giant cell (temporal) arteritis - Chronic vasculitis of both large and medium vessels, primarily affecting cranial branches of the arteries arising from the aortic arch.
Medium vessel vasculitis
- Polyarteritis nodosa - Systemic necrotizing vasculitis and aneurysm formation affecting both medium and small arteries. If only small vessels are affected, it is called microscopic polyangiitis, although it is more associated with Wegener's granulomatosis than to classic PAN.
- Wegener's granulomatosis - Systemic vasculitis of medium and small arteries, including venules and arterioles. Produces granulomatous inflammation of the respiratory tracts and necrotizing, pauci-immune glomerulonephritis. Most common cause of saddle nose deformity in USA (nose flattened due to destruction of nasal septum by granulomatous inflammation).