Takayasu arteritis in childhood: misdiagnoses at disease onset and associated diseases

Juvenile-Takayasu arteritis (j-TA) is a difficult diagnosis and some patients develop uncommon manifestations and associated diseases that may contribute to the delayed diagnosis. Our aim was to identify the misdiagnoses, the associated diseases and the atypical manifestations observed in a j-TA Bra...

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Veröffentlicht in:Rheumatology international 2018-06, Vol.38 (6), p.1089-1094
Hauptverfasser: Clemente, Gleice, Silva, Clovis A., Sacchetti, Silvana B., Ferriani, Virginia P. L., Oliveira, Sheila K., Sztajnbok, Flavio, Bica, Blanca E. R. G., Cavalcanti, André, Robazzi, Teresa, Bandeira, Marcia, Terreri, Maria Teresa
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container_end_page 1094
container_issue 6
container_start_page 1089
container_title Rheumatology international
container_volume 38
creator Clemente, Gleice
Silva, Clovis A.
Sacchetti, Silvana B.
Ferriani, Virginia P. L.
Oliveira, Sheila K.
Sztajnbok, Flavio
Bica, Blanca E. R. G.
Cavalcanti, André
Robazzi, Teresa
Bandeira, Marcia
Terreri, Maria Teresa
description Juvenile-Takayasu arteritis (j-TA) is a difficult diagnosis and some patients develop uncommon manifestations and associated diseases that may contribute to the delayed diagnosis. Our aim was to identify the misdiagnoses, the associated diseases and the atypical manifestations observed in a j-TA Brazilian multicentre study. 71 children and adolescents who met the classification criteria for j-TA were included. The misdiagnoses, the associated diseases and the atypical manifestations were evaluated. 19 (26.8%) patients had misdiagnoses. The most common of them was aortic coarctation in six (8.4%) patients, followed by rheumatic fever in five (7.0%) and one patient presented with both former diagnoses. Limb pain (two patients), spondyloarthropathy, juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA), spinal arteriovenous malformation, polyarteritis nodosa (PAN) and fever of unknown origin (FUO) were other misdiagnoses. Patients who had misdiagnoses previously to j-TA diagnosis presented a trend to have a longer diagnosis delay. 11 (15.5%) patients had 14 TA-associated diseases, such as pulmonary tuberculosis (5 patients), rheumatic fever (2 patients), spondyloarthropathy, polyarticular JIA, Crohn’s disease, Prader–Willi disease, diabetes mellitus, Moyamoya and primary immunodeficiency. 7 (9.9%) patients presented 10 atypical manifestations, such as pyoderma gangrenosum, erythema nodosum, myositis, chorea, enthesitis, episcleritis, uveitis, hepatomegaly, splenomegaly and necrosis of extremities. Our study emphasizes the main misdiagnoses, associated diseases and atypical manifestations that occur in patients with j-TA and warns of the features that may alert paediatricians to this diagnosis, such as constitutional symptoms and elevated inflammatory markers.
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L.</au><au>Oliveira, Sheila K.</au><au>Sztajnbok, Flavio</au><au>Bica, Blanca E. R. G.</au><au>Cavalcanti, André</au><au>Robazzi, Teresa</au><au>Bandeira, Marcia</au><au>Terreri, Maria Teresa</au><format>journal</format><genre>article</genre><ristype>JOUR</ristype><atitle>Takayasu arteritis in childhood: misdiagnoses at disease onset and associated diseases</atitle><jtitle>Rheumatology international</jtitle><stitle>Rheumatol Int</stitle><addtitle>Rheumatol Int</addtitle><date>2018-06-01</date><risdate>2018</risdate><volume>38</volume><issue>6</issue><spage>1089</spage><epage>1094</epage><pages>1089-1094</pages><issn>0172-8172</issn><eissn>1437-160X</eissn><abstract>Juvenile-Takayasu arteritis (j-TA) is a difficult diagnosis and some patients develop uncommon manifestations and associated diseases that may contribute to the delayed diagnosis. 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subjects Adolescent
Brazil
Child
Childhood
Crohn's disease
Diagnosis, Differential
Diagnostic Errors
Female
Humans
Male
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Observational Research
Polyarteritis Nodosa
Retrospective Studies
Rheumatic fever
Rheumatology
Takayasu Arteritis - complications
Takayasu Arteritis - diagnosis
Tuberculosis
Vein & artery diseases
title Takayasu arteritis in childhood: misdiagnoses at disease onset and associated diseases
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