NDT Advance Access originally published online on July 6, 2004
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation 2004 19(9):2245-2249; doi:10.1093/ndt/gfh347
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Nephrol Dial Transplant Vol. 19 No. 9 © ERA-EDTA 2004; all rights reserved
Original Article
Nail fold videocapillaroscopy in mixed cryoglobulinaemia
Cattedre di Patologia Clinica, Università di Torino e Centro Multidisciplinare di Ricerche di Immunopatologia e Documentazione su Malattie Rare a Direzione Universitaria, ASL 4, Torino, Italy
Correspondence and offprint requests to: Dario Roccatello, Cattedra di Patologia Clinica, Università di Torino, e Centro Multidisciplinare di Ricerche di Immunopatologia e Documentazione su Malattie Rare a Direzione Universitaria, ASL4, Piazza Donatore di Sangue 3, 10154 Torino, Italy. Email: dario.roccatello{at}unito.it
Background. Nail fold videocapillaroscopy (NVC) has been extensively used to examine morphological and functional changes of microcirculation in connective tissue diseases. The nutritional circulation that depends on tissue capillaries, can be expected to be significantly impacted in mixed cryoglobulinaemia (MC).
Methods. Using NVC, we evaluated 29 patients with MC (19 women), mean age 66 years (range 4083). They included 28 hepatitis C virus (HCV) positive patients14 genotype 1b, 10 genotype 2a 2c, two genotype 4, two with undetermined genotype. Of them, 18 had type II (IgMk-IgG) MC and 11 had type III. All patients were symptomatic, presenting with weakness (24 of 29 patients), arthralgia (24), purpura (16), peripheral neuropathy (20), Raynaud's phenomenon (8), hypertension (19) and membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis (MPGN) (9). The nail fold capillaries of four fingers per hand were examined using a videomicroscope.
Results. Of the 29 patients, 27 had morphological abnormalities (including tortuosity and apical enlargement), 18 had capillaries with deeply altered orientations, 17 had shortened capillaries and 20 neoangiogenetic phenomena. These four types of capillary abnormalities were simultaneously present in 10, suggesting this combination to be a characteristic pattern in MC. Less common alterations included haemorrhages (10 cases), enlarged and giant capillaries (2) and avascular areas (2). The patients with MC-associated MPGN had a significantly greater number of capillary abnormalities (mean 4.5, range 46) than non-nephritic patients (mean 3.5, range 16, P = 0.01). The number of capillary abnormalities was not related to the presence of Raynaud's phenomenon. Microcirculatory changes did not correlate with other clinical manifestations or serological indices, including cryocrit, cryoglobulin type, HCV genotype, viral load, haemoglobin, ALT, rheumatoid factor, IgM and C4 levels.
Conclusions. Patients with MC show a variety of microcirculatory changes, often clustered in a characteristic pattern of abnormally oriented, short capillaries and neoangiogenetic phenomena. Capillary changes are more numerous in nephritic patients.
Keywords: cryoglobulinaemic glomerulonephritis; microcirculation; mixed cryoglobulinaemia; nail fold videocapillaroscopy
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