Difference between revisions of "Leukocytoclastic vasculitis"
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[[Image:2013-03-17_leg.jpg|thumb|right|Left leg 2013-03-17, the day before my birthday. I didn't photograph my other leg at the time because I was just trying to show mom the LV itself, not the secondary infection that had set in on the right leg. Also, I was in intense pain, so I wasn't exactly thinking about chronicling.]] | [[Image:2013-03-17_leg.jpg|thumb|right|Left leg 2013-03-17, the day before my birthday. I didn't photograph my other leg at the time because I was just trying to show mom the LV itself, not the secondary infection that had set in on the right leg. Also, I was in intense pain, so I wasn't exactly thinking about chronicling.]] | ||
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==TL;DR== | ==TL;DR== | ||
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{{quote|quote= Leukocytoclastic vasculitis is the most common form of small-vessel necrotizing vasculitis[...]<br /> The characteristic lesions are referred to as palpable purpura. The lesion begins as a localized area of cutaneous hemorrhage that acquires substance and becomes palpable as blood leaks out of damaged venules. Nodules, bullae, and ulcers may arise from these purpuric areas and indicate more severe vessel imflamation and necrosis[...]<br /> Prodromal symptoms include fever, malaise, myalgia, and joint pain. Small lesions itch and are painful; nodules, ulcers, and bullae may be very painful.<br /> Lesions appear in crops and last 1 to 4 weeks. Recurrences are common and new crops may appear for weeks, months, or years.|book=Clinical Dermatology: A Color Guide to Diagnosis and Therapy|reference=page 376|width=50%}} | {{quote|quote= Leukocytoclastic vasculitis is the most common form of small-vessel necrotizing vasculitis[...]<br /> The characteristic lesions are referred to as palpable purpura. The lesion begins as a localized area of cutaneous hemorrhage that acquires substance and becomes palpable as blood leaks out of damaged venules. Nodules, bullae, and ulcers may arise from these purpuric areas and indicate more severe vessel imflamation and necrosis[...]<br /> Prodromal symptoms include fever, malaise, myalgia, and joint pain. Small lesions itch and are painful; nodules, ulcers, and bullae may be very painful.<br /> Lesions appear in crops and last 1 to 4 weeks. Recurrences are common and new crops may appear for weeks, months, or years.|book=Clinical Dermatology: A Color Guide to Diagnosis and Therapy|reference=page 376|width=50%}} | ||
− | This is a post I've been promising to write for a long time now, but I've been reluctant to put it out to the public and have only told a handful of close friends. I've procrastinated on it until I knew what it was, then until we saw if it involved the kidneys, then until I got confirmation from the biopsy, then seeing how the treatment was working. However, it's time to stop procrastinating. I have e-mails from friends casually asking how I am that I haven't replied to in months. Our annual family get-together is in a few weeks and my father's birthday is today, so people are going to be wondering why I'm not going. So, here goes... | + | This is a post I've been promising to write for a long time now, but I've been reluctant to put it out to the public and have only told a handful of close friends. I've procrastinated on it until I knew what it was, then until we saw if it involved the kidneys, then until I got confirmation from the biopsy, then seeing how the treatment was working. However, it's time to stop procrastinating. I have e-mails from friends casually asking how I am that I haven't replied to in months. Our annual family get-together is in a few weeks and my father's birthday is today, so people are going to be wondering why I'm not going. So, here goes... (I've decided to post this here instead of my LiveJournal account because I want to keep the images under my own control.) |
About a week after my friend Jana came to visit me in February, I started getting small red spots around my knee. They itched and so at first I thought they might be bedbug bites, since I had spent nearly two months in hotels at field tests at [http://www.srnl.gov SRNL], in CO for the holidays, and after totaling my car in Iowa. A week later, the spots had spread across to the other leg and became more of an itchy rash on my thigh. In the beginning of March, I had spots on my left hand and swelling and joint stiffness in my hands. At this point, the spots on my legs started turning purple and started coalescing. A week later, a secondary infection had set in on my right leg and the spots were turning black. At this point, when I showed our secretary, she told me "Go to an emergency room NOW!" This finally made me take it seriously and I went to see my doctor, who then referred me to a dermatologist. The dermatologist instantly recognized it and told me it was leukocytoclastic vasculitis, giving me the above page from her reference manual. We started a course of oral antibiotics to fight the secondary infection and started topical steroids and antibiotics to try to bring it under control. | About a week after my friend Jana came to visit me in February, I started getting small red spots around my knee. They itched and so at first I thought they might be bedbug bites, since I had spent nearly two months in hotels at field tests at [http://www.srnl.gov SRNL], in CO for the holidays, and after totaling my car in Iowa. A week later, the spots had spread across to the other leg and became more of an itchy rash on my thigh. In the beginning of March, I had spots on my left hand and swelling and joint stiffness in my hands. At this point, the spots on my legs started turning purple and started coalescing. A week later, a secondary infection had set in on my right leg and the spots were turning black. At this point, when I showed our secretary, she told me "Go to an emergency room NOW!" This finally made me take it seriously and I went to see my doctor, who then referred me to a dermatologist. The dermatologist instantly recognized it and told me it was leukocytoclastic vasculitis, giving me the above page from her reference manual. We started a course of oral antibiotics to fight the secondary infection and started topical steroids and antibiotics to try to bring it under control. | ||
− | At this point, I took two weeks of sick leave then switched over to half-time sick leave for the next month. (Yay for benefits!) | + | At this point, I took two weeks of sick leave then switched over to half-time sick leave for the next month. (Yay for benefits! My boss has also been VERY understanding throughout this process. By freaky coincidence, our secretary's son also developed vasculitis about the same time I did.) During this time, the swelling would cause incredible pain if I was up for more than three hours. Consequently, I was on bed-rest much of this time, which led to the spread of the rash up onto my back, arms, and lower abdomen. (Not to mention getting a common run-of-the-mill pressure sore from being on my back most of this time since I could not stand to let anything touch the front of my legs.) |
− | + | I have had 4 outbreaks since February, occurring almost exactly one month apart. However, they take about 2 months to go from outbreak to healed, so I have been having two sets of lesions going at any one time. The third convinced the dermatologist to send me on to a rheumatologist since it appears to be chronic. After receiving the results of the biopsy, he agreed with the LV diagnosis and started me on a course of oral steroids a couple of weeks ago. As of this writing, I have had no new outbreaks in the last two weeks and the old ones are finally starting to heal. The malaise and depression are finally breaking and I'm able to start getting things done again (as can be seen by this very post.) | |
+ | I've been tracking my progress with the number of band-aids and bandages I have to use if I wear shoes. Today was 3 gauze pads and no band-aids. (Down from 5 and 6 two weeks ago.) | ||
+ | Oh, and after things heal, my legs are left with discolored blotches, so I've gotten the nickname Giraffe Legs. Great. | ||
− | + | ===My Symptoms=== | |
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
+ | *With me, the LV seems to go through 4 basic stages: | ||
+ | *#An itchy red rash, often with inflammation (the tissue feels welted up and tough) This has expressed itself on my feet, legs, thighs, back, arms, hands, abdomen, well, basically everywhere but my face. | ||
+ | *#*Sometimes this is preceded (as in the initial outbreak) by isolated red spots, but usually it jumps straight to a rash. | ||
+ | *#[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Purpura Palpable purpura], or as I like to call them, "palpable purples". This stage is very touch sensitive, I can't even have a sheet over me at night. Anything that touches me makes me feel like my nerves are on fire. These occur mostly on the lower legs, but I did have a few on my thighs and abdomen. | ||
+ | *#A stage I call [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Restless_legs_syndrome RLS] from hell. If RLS can be thought of as the sense that a needle is about to poke you and you need to flinch away, this stage is like the needle is dipped in acid and F!@#, I didn't flinch in time! (This may be a combination of the previous stage complicated with actual RLS, which I do tend to have at times.) | ||
+ | *#Blisters (bullae), ulcerations, and lots of general oozing then crusting over. When an area is oozing I get ice-picks of sharp pain and hypersensitivity at night. This is the stage I usually end up screaming at night, even if a reflected breeze from the fan hits me. Very little sleep occurs. I just saw a pillowcase I put under my leg one night during this stage and, well, I would show you, but it's kind of gross. The ulcerations take the longest to heal. | ||
+ | *#*Fun fact: If a blister doesn't pop, but instead dries up under the skin, you can play around with the dried blood like a little hockey puck under your skin. | ||
+ | *#*At this stage I can't wear shoes or long pants due to the sensitivity / pain. I apologize to all of my co-workers for having to see this. | ||
+ | *Fevers kicked in when the secondary infection had taken root. So, getting chills but not being able to stand even a sheet touching me in the middle of winter was... uncomfortable to say the least. | ||
+ | *During early stages there was a lot of swelling, leading to further pain. At this point I couldn't be up more than 3 hours. (Certain activities, such as sitting at a desk, I could only take in 15 minute increments.) | ||
+ | *Since this started I have had a general sense of malaise / lethargia. This has also acted as an appetite suppressant, so yay? I've lost over 40 lbs since November, partly because of simply non-eating and partly because of a conscious decision to get back on track after 2 months of hotel food. | ||
+ | *Occasional bouts of joint stiffness / muscle fatigue (myalgia) | ||
+ | *Depression, which has led me to be a bit anti-social of late. My apologies. The thought of having to deal with this for the rest of my life, or it progressing to the internal organs and shortening that life has made me very depressed at times. When people casually ask me how I am without knowing anything, I want to say the truth, but I know they're not wanting to hear me complain, so I basically have just been avoiding social contact. | ||
+ | **One interesting side-effect is that I've completely lost all concept of long time during this. So, even if I've been ignoring you for months, to me it all seems like a couple of weeks ago that this started. | ||
+ | *Insomnia. Yeah, as described above, the pain (plus the steroids, apparently) have left me with many sleepless nights. | ||
+ | *There have been days when I took off my clothing and there was some spot of blood from the oozing sores in every single article of clothing *sigh* | ||
+ | **Bloody socks are a regular thing. | ||
+ | **I had a really bad scare one week when I found blood in my underwear. The doctors had told me to be on the lookout for this since it might be an indication that the vasculitis had started attacking the kidneys. If it gets into the kidneys, the prognosis isn't good*. I was scared. It turned out to be oozing from sores on my abdomen. Yay for oozing abdominal sores? | ||
+ | ***The reference book mentioned above also states that leukocytoclastic vasculitis can involve kidney disease 50% of the time. If this happens, you have to go on immune suppressants for the rest of your life and the prognosis was still not good. [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12666064 One paper] I saw indicates a mortality rate of 13% over 5 years. Fortunately, my blood and urine tests have been clean, so it appears to be localized to the skin. | ||
+ | **Speaking of blood, I've given more blood in the last couple of months than I've given in my entire life before that. Well, not so much "given" as "had forcibly extracted". | ||
+ | *One possible side-effect of using the steroids is potentially tipping the scales on diabetes if one has, like me, a family history of diabetes. During the first few rounds of blood tests I saw my blood sugar climbing each time. We have to keep close watch on this. I have eliminated much sugar and refined carbohydrates from my diet lately, so this is a good result, if one wants to look on the bright side. | ||
===Biopsy results=== | ===Biopsy results=== | ||
Line 45: | Line 57: | ||
Translation: "Yeah, it's leukocytoclastic vasculitis, but we don't have a clue what's causing it." The rheumatologist gave the analogy of being set down from a balloon in the middle of a cornfield. You know you are in a cornfield, but you don't have a clue what country you are in. | Translation: "Yeah, it's leukocytoclastic vasculitis, but we don't have a clue what's causing it." The rheumatologist gave the analogy of being set down from a balloon in the middle of a cornfield. You know you are in a cornfield, but you don't have a clue what country you are in. | ||
− | What does this mean? Well, it means we have a definite diagnosis on LV, but we do not know the initial trigger. In approximately 50% of the cases, they never find out a trigger, so I don't have my hopes up. Through blood and urine tests, we have largely ruled out systemic (internal organ) involvement, so that is a Good Thing<sup>TM</sup>. | + | What does this mean? Well, it means we have a definite diagnosis on LV, but we do not know the initial trigger. In approximately 50% of the cases, they never find out a trigger, so I don't have my hopes up. Through blood and urine tests, we have largely ruled out systemic (internal organ) involvement, so that is a Good Thing<sup>TM</sup>. Once we confirmed the diagnosis, we started an aggressive course of oral steroids, which appears to be working. YAY! |
+ | |||
+ | Many references I see to LV (including [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leukocytoclastic_vasculitis Wikipedia]) refer to it as 'cutaneous small-vessel vasculitis', but my pathology report indicates medium-vessel involvement, which had me worried for a little while, but the rheumatologist said that's within acceptable variance. LV is actually a broad category of conditions, not just a single disease. | ||
{{quote|quote=The vasculitides are conditions of unknown [http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/etiology aetiology]. Until recently, relatively little was known about their incidence and prevalence.|width=50%| | {{quote|quote=The vasculitides are conditions of unknown [http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/etiology aetiology]. Until recently, relatively little was known about their incidence and prevalence.|width=50%| | ||
author=[http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.berh.2004.11.006 Watts, et al]|reference=What is known about the epidemiology of the vasculitides?|year=2005}} | author=[http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.berh.2004.11.006 Watts, et al]|reference=What is known about the epidemiology of the vasculitides?|year=2005}} | ||
+ | Many different possible causes are known. These range from [http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/1083719-overview hypersensitivity vasculitis] (allergic reactions to flu shots and other drugs), cancer (leukemia), infections, kidney disease, all the way down to [http://archive.ispub.com/journal/the-internet-journal-of-dermatology/volume-9-number-1/cutaneous-leukocytoclastic-vasculitis-associated-with-a-fast-food-diet.html#sthash.uc02Td1a.dpbs one case of being associated with fast food]. Again, in a large part of the cases, no primary trigger is ever found, which appears to be the situation in my case. | ||
===Epidemiology=== | ===Epidemiology=== | ||
− | The occurrence of leukocytoclastic vasculitis in adults is rare. Studies in [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10693883 the UK], [http://ard.bmj.com/content/60/2/170.short Spain], etc. have shown rates ranging from 10-40 adults per million per year. Anecdotally my dermatologist sees about ten cases per year (including children) and my rheumatologist has seen about 10 cases in his entire career. While | + | The occurrence of leukocytoclastic vasculitis in adults is rare. Studies in [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10693883 the UK], [http://ard.bmj.com/content/60/2/170.short Spain], etc. have shown rates ranging from 10-40 adults per million per year. Anecdotally my dermatologist sees about ten cases per year (including children) and my rheumatologist has seen about 10 cases in his entire career. While on the surface these seem contradictory, they're not. The dermatologist's numbers include children where it is known as [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henoch-Sch%C3%B6nlein_purpura Henoch-Schönlein purpura]. Dermatologists are usually the first line of defense and the condition is often only referred to a rheumatologist when it becomes apparent that it is likely chronic. My understanding is that, in children, the condition usually goes away quickly and is rarely chronic. |
+ | |||
+ | ===Summary=== | ||
+ | |||
+ | (OUCH!) Stop necrotizing yourself! (OUCH!) Stop necrotizing yourself! (OUCH!) | ||
+ | |||
+ | Things are doing much better this week. Today I'm down to 3 gauze pads and no band-aids. The malaise seems to have finally worn off and I'm getting a lot accomplished. I'm finally getting sleep again. I'm actually feeling like being social once more. | ||
+ | |||
+ | I'll update this page in the future as progress warrants. The permanent link is: http://tometheus.com/lv | ||
+ | |||
+ | So, that's how I've been the past few months. How are you? | ||
+ | |||
+ | --[[Image:Tometheus-sig.png]] [[User:Tometheus|Tometheus]] <small>([[User_talk:Tometheus|talk]])</small> 19:22, 27 June 2013 (CDT) | ||
+ | |||
+ | PS: I've disabled comments from un-registered people on the wiki and disabled registrations because I have come to despise comment threads. If you wish to leave a message, you can use my [http://tometheus.com/contact.html contact form]. | ||
+ | PPS: OK, so I really disabled new registrations because within 4 hours after opening it up to new accounts I had already gotten a spam registration. Ugh. | ||
+ | PPPS: One bright spot in all of this is that I love my new car! I get about 60mpg on the trips to the doctor's offices. | ||
{{clear}} | {{clear}} | ||
---- | ---- | ||
{{:leukocytoclastic_vasculitis_images}} | {{:leukocytoclastic_vasculitis_images}} | ||
+ | [[Category:RanTom Thoughts]] |
Latest revision as of 19:40, 20 February 2015
Contents
TL;DR
For the TL;DR crowd: In February I developed a condition called leukocytoclastic vasculitis, which is essentially a disease where the immune system decides your blood vessels are foreign invaders and attempts to destroy them. It appears to be chronic, however, there doesn't appear to be internal organ involvement, and it looks like we're finally getting it under control with oral steroids.
2013-06-27: *Deep breath* Here goes...
When your dermatologist hands you a copy of the page from her reference book and you see the first line describing your condition includes "small-vessel necrotizing vasculitis", the teenage boy in you reading his mom's medical encyclopedia starts shouting "Cool! I have something with necrotizing in the description!", but then the middle-aged man in you kicks in and says "YOU FOOL! DON'T YOU UNDERSTAND THAT MEANS DEATH! YOUR OWN IMMUNE SYSTEM IS OUT TO KILL YOU!" However, the teenager mumbles under his breath as he grabs the keys for the new car and dodges out the door, "I still think it's cool."
|
This is a post I've been promising to write for a long time now, but I've been reluctant to put it out to the public and have only told a handful of close friends. I've procrastinated on it until I knew what it was, then until we saw if it involved the kidneys, then until I got confirmation from the biopsy, then seeing how the treatment was working. However, it's time to stop procrastinating. I have e-mails from friends casually asking how I am that I haven't replied to in months. Our annual family get-together is in a few weeks and my father's birthday is today, so people are going to be wondering why I'm not going. So, here goes... (I've decided to post this here instead of my LiveJournal account because I want to keep the images under my own control.)
About a week after my friend Jana came to visit me in February, I started getting small red spots around my knee. They itched and so at first I thought they might be bedbug bites, since I had spent nearly two months in hotels at field tests at SRNL, in CO for the holidays, and after totaling my car in Iowa. A week later, the spots had spread across to the other leg and became more of an itchy rash on my thigh. In the beginning of March, I had spots on my left hand and swelling and joint stiffness in my hands. At this point, the spots on my legs started turning purple and started coalescing. A week later, a secondary infection had set in on my right leg and the spots were turning black. At this point, when I showed our secretary, she told me "Go to an emergency room NOW!" This finally made me take it seriously and I went to see my doctor, who then referred me to a dermatologist. The dermatologist instantly recognized it and told me it was leukocytoclastic vasculitis, giving me the above page from her reference manual. We started a course of oral antibiotics to fight the secondary infection and started topical steroids and antibiotics to try to bring it under control.
At this point, I took two weeks of sick leave then switched over to half-time sick leave for the next month. (Yay for benefits! My boss has also been VERY understanding throughout this process. By freaky coincidence, our secretary's son also developed vasculitis about the same time I did.) During this time, the swelling would cause incredible pain if I was up for more than three hours. Consequently, I was on bed-rest much of this time, which led to the spread of the rash up onto my back, arms, and lower abdomen. (Not to mention getting a common run-of-the-mill pressure sore from being on my back most of this time since I could not stand to let anything touch the front of my legs.)
I have had 4 outbreaks since February, occurring almost exactly one month apart. However, they take about 2 months to go from outbreak to healed, so I have been having two sets of lesions going at any one time. The third convinced the dermatologist to send me on to a rheumatologist since it appears to be chronic. After receiving the results of the biopsy, he agreed with the LV diagnosis and started me on a course of oral steroids a couple of weeks ago. As of this writing, I have had no new outbreaks in the last two weeks and the old ones are finally starting to heal. The malaise and depression are finally breaking and I'm able to start getting things done again (as can be seen by this very post.)
I've been tracking my progress with the number of band-aids and bandages I have to use if I wear shoes. Today was 3 gauze pads and no band-aids. (Down from 5 and 6 two weeks ago.)
Oh, and after things heal, my legs are left with discolored blotches, so I've gotten the nickname Giraffe Legs. Great.
My Symptoms
- With me, the LV seems to go through 4 basic stages:
- An itchy red rash, often with inflammation (the tissue feels welted up and tough) This has expressed itself on my feet, legs, thighs, back, arms, hands, abdomen, well, basically everywhere but my face.
- Sometimes this is preceded (as in the initial outbreak) by isolated red spots, but usually it jumps straight to a rash.
- Palpable purpura, or as I like to call them, "palpable purples". This stage is very touch sensitive, I can't even have a sheet over me at night. Anything that touches me makes me feel like my nerves are on fire. These occur mostly on the lower legs, but I did have a few on my thighs and abdomen.
- A stage I call RLS from hell. If RLS can be thought of as the sense that a needle is about to poke you and you need to flinch away, this stage is like the needle is dipped in acid and F!@#, I didn't flinch in time! (This may be a combination of the previous stage complicated with actual RLS, which I do tend to have at times.)
- Blisters (bullae), ulcerations, and lots of general oozing then crusting over. When an area is oozing I get ice-picks of sharp pain and hypersensitivity at night. This is the stage I usually end up screaming at night, even if a reflected breeze from the fan hits me. Very little sleep occurs. I just saw a pillowcase I put under my leg one night during this stage and, well, I would show you, but it's kind of gross. The ulcerations take the longest to heal.
- Fun fact: If a blister doesn't pop, but instead dries up under the skin, you can play around with the dried blood like a little hockey puck under your skin.
- At this stage I can't wear shoes or long pants due to the sensitivity / pain. I apologize to all of my co-workers for having to see this.
- An itchy red rash, often with inflammation (the tissue feels welted up and tough) This has expressed itself on my feet, legs, thighs, back, arms, hands, abdomen, well, basically everywhere but my face.
- Fevers kicked in when the secondary infection had taken root. So, getting chills but not being able to stand even a sheet touching me in the middle of winter was... uncomfortable to say the least.
- During early stages there was a lot of swelling, leading to further pain. At this point I couldn't be up more than 3 hours. (Certain activities, such as sitting at a desk, I could only take in 15 minute increments.)
- Since this started I have had a general sense of malaise / lethargia. This has also acted as an appetite suppressant, so yay? I've lost over 40 lbs since November, partly because of simply non-eating and partly because of a conscious decision to get back on track after 2 months of hotel food.
- Occasional bouts of joint stiffness / muscle fatigue (myalgia)
- Depression, which has led me to be a bit anti-social of late. My apologies. The thought of having to deal with this for the rest of my life, or it progressing to the internal organs and shortening that life has made me very depressed at times. When people casually ask me how I am without knowing anything, I want to say the truth, but I know they're not wanting to hear me complain, so I basically have just been avoiding social contact.
- One interesting side-effect is that I've completely lost all concept of long time during this. So, even if I've been ignoring you for months, to me it all seems like a couple of weeks ago that this started.
- Insomnia. Yeah, as described above, the pain (plus the steroids, apparently) have left me with many sleepless nights.
- There have been days when I took off my clothing and there was some spot of blood from the oozing sores in every single article of clothing *sigh*
- Bloody socks are a regular thing.
- I had a really bad scare one week when I found blood in my underwear. The doctors had told me to be on the lookout for this since it might be an indication that the vasculitis had started attacking the kidneys. If it gets into the kidneys, the prognosis isn't good*. I was scared. It turned out to be oozing from sores on my abdomen. Yay for oozing abdominal sores?
- The reference book mentioned above also states that leukocytoclastic vasculitis can involve kidney disease 50% of the time. If this happens, you have to go on immune suppressants for the rest of your life and the prognosis was still not good. One paper I saw indicates a mortality rate of 13% over 5 years. Fortunately, my blood and urine tests have been clean, so it appears to be localized to the skin.
- Speaking of blood, I've given more blood in the last couple of months than I've given in my entire life before that. Well, not so much "given" as "had forcibly extracted".
- One possible side-effect of using the steroids is potentially tipping the scales on diabetes if one has, like me, a family history of diabetes. During the first few rounds of blood tests I saw my blood sugar climbing each time. We have to keep close watch on this. I have eliminated much sugar and refined carbohydrates from my diet lately, so this is a good result, if one wants to look on the bright side.
Biopsy results
On 2013-05-10 I went in to a surgeon to get a two-punch biopsy on a fresh lesion. The biopsy results indicated the following:
|
|
Translation: "Yeah, it's leukocytoclastic vasculitis, but we don't have a clue what's causing it." The rheumatologist gave the analogy of being set down from a balloon in the middle of a cornfield. You know you are in a cornfield, but you don't have a clue what country you are in.
What does this mean? Well, it means we have a definite diagnosis on LV, but we do not know the initial trigger. In approximately 50% of the cases, they never find out a trigger, so I don't have my hopes up. Through blood and urine tests, we have largely ruled out systemic (internal organ) involvement, so that is a Good ThingTM. Once we confirmed the diagnosis, we started an aggressive course of oral steroids, which appears to be working. YAY!
Many references I see to LV (including Wikipedia) refer to it as 'cutaneous small-vessel vasculitis', but my pathology report indicates medium-vessel involvement, which had me worried for a little while, but the rheumatologist said that's within acceptable variance. LV is actually a broad category of conditions, not just a single disease.
|
Many different possible causes are known. These range from hypersensitivity vasculitis (allergic reactions to flu shots and other drugs), cancer (leukemia), infections, kidney disease, all the way down to one case of being associated with fast food. Again, in a large part of the cases, no primary trigger is ever found, which appears to be the situation in my case.
Epidemiology
The occurrence of leukocytoclastic vasculitis in adults is rare. Studies in the UK, Spain, etc. have shown rates ranging from 10-40 adults per million per year. Anecdotally my dermatologist sees about ten cases per year (including children) and my rheumatologist has seen about 10 cases in his entire career. While on the surface these seem contradictory, they're not. The dermatologist's numbers include children where it is known as Henoch-Schönlein purpura. Dermatologists are usually the first line of defense and the condition is often only referred to a rheumatologist when it becomes apparent that it is likely chronic. My understanding is that, in children, the condition usually goes away quickly and is rarely chronic.
Summary
(OUCH!) Stop necrotizing yourself! (OUCH!) Stop necrotizing yourself! (OUCH!)
Things are doing much better this week. Today I'm down to 3 gauze pads and no band-aids. The malaise seems to have finally worn off and I'm getting a lot accomplished. I'm finally getting sleep again. I'm actually feeling like being social once more.
I'll update this page in the future as progress warrants. The permanent link is: http://tometheus.com/lv
So, that's how I've been the past few months. How are you?
-- Tometheus (talk) 19:22, 27 June 2013 (CDT)
PS: I've disabled comments from un-registered people on the wiki and disabled registrations because I have come to despise comment threads. If you wish to leave a message, you can use my contact form.
PPS: OK, so I really disabled new registrations because within 4 hours after opening it up to new accounts I had already gotten a spam registration. Ugh.
PPPS: One bright spot in all of this is that I love my new car! I get about 60mpg on the trips to the doctor's offices.
- Images of my progress with leukocytoclastic vasculitis
2013-03-17
Left leg the day before my birthday. I didn't photograph my other leg at the time because I was just trying to show mom the LV itself, not the secondary infection that had set in on the right leg. Also, I was in intense pain, so I wasn't exactly thinking about chronicling.2013-04-22
The beginning of the third round of LV outbreaks. This was the one that prompted my dermatologist to turn me over to a rheumatologist, since it was starting to look like a chronic condition.2013-05-24
The beginning of the fourth round of LV outbreaks. You can see how large the third round ankle spot got.2013-06-20
Fourth round of LV outbreaks is finally healing after treatment with oral steroids. You can see the swelling has gone down considerably between the previous picture and this one.