Churg-Strauss Syndrome


Risk

  • Rare: 2–5 new cases/million/y

  • Average age of onset: 35–50 y

  • Male = female

Perioperative Risks

  • Necrotizing eosinophilic vasculitis involving respiratory (100% of pts), cardiac (30–60% of pts), neurologic, GI, renal, and integumentary systems

Worry About

  • Respiratory complications from severe asthma exacerbations

  • CV collapse from coronary artery vasculitis, myocarditis, or cardiac tamponade; represents the major cause of mortality

  • Peripheral and central neurologic defects (mononeuritis multiplex and cerebral infarcts)

  • GI vasculitis (abdominal pain and bleeding)

  • Effects of the standard treatments (steroids and immunosuppressants)

Overview

  • Syndrome includes (1) a history of late-onset asthma, (2) eosinophilia, and (3) systemic vasculitis in two or more organ systems.

  • Most pts have generalized symptoms, but respiratory effects such as asthma and pulmonary infiltrates are a core clinical feature.

  • Affects all major organ systems to varying degrees.

  • Delayed diagnosis is common because the first manifestation is usually synonymous with asthma and allergic rhinitis.

  • Diagnosis should be considered in pts with asthma and an increased blood eosinophil count or pulmonary infiltrates.

  • Prognosis: Remission can be obtained in >80% of pts, but relapse does occur.

  • 5-y survival is 80%.

  • Asthmatic symptoms usually persist despite recovery from vasculitic symptoms requiring chronic steroid use.

Etiology

  • Attributed to an immune reaction to inhaled allergens, but the cause is unknown.

  • Possible link to leukotriene receptors antagonist use.

  • Three successive phases: (1) asthma and allergic manifestations → (2) blood eosinophil and tissue eosinophil infiltration → (3) systemic phase with subsequent necrotizing vasculitis.

  • Clinical features tend to divide into two phenotypes: A vasculitic type with manifestations caused by small-vessel vasculitis (purpura, mononeuritis, and renal), and an eosinophilic type, where organ damage is a result of eosinophil infiltration (pulmonary and cardiac involvement). ANCA-positive pts tend to have the vasculitic type.

You're Reading a Preview

Become a Clinical Tree membership for Full access and enjoy Unlimited articles

Become membership

If you are a member. Log in here