Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Extremely rare: approximately 250 reported cases in the literature
Mean presentation 30–40 y; however, cases in children and elderly reported
No predilection for gender, race, or ethnicity
Possible association with IBD
Hemorrhage
Thrombosis and organ/limb ischemia
Adrenal insufficiency and immunosuppression due to chronic treatment
Postop N/V with vestibuloauditory dysfunction
Activity state of disease and hemorrhage/extension of pathologic vasculitis
Coexisting vasculitis affecting cerebral, cardiac, mesenteric, and renal perfusion
Sepsis with immunosuppression
Heterogeneous presentation of nonsyphilitic interstitial keratitis and vestibuloauditory symptoms within 2 y of each other; note an atypical version allows exceptions to these criteria
10–15% of pts develop large cell vasculitis, usually aortitis
Coronary involvement: often asymptomatic
Typically sudden severe bilateral hearing loss; distinct from unilateral Meniere disease; deafness develops in ∼50% of pts.
Recurrent flares for majority of pts
Mean long-term survival: 20+ y after diagnosis
No definitive cause, but an autoimmune process is suspected; often preceded by a viral prodrome.
Proposed mechanisms include antibodies to an inner ear peptide, Cogan peptide, and HSP70.
Rheumatoid factor and ANA are not consistently associated with diagnosis, but a small percent of pts are ANCA+.
Approximately 50% have a history of daily smoking, and approximately 33% have or develop IBD.
Become a Clinical Tree membership for Full access and enjoy Unlimited articles
If you are a member. Log in here