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In pathology, hypertrophic decidual vasculopathy, abbreviated HDV, is the histomorphologic correlate of gestational hypertension, as may be seen in intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) and HELLP syndrome.
The name of the condition describes its appearance under the microscope; the smooth muscle of the decidual (or maternal) blood vessels is hypertrophic, i.e. the muscle part of the blood vessels feeding the placenta is larger due to cellular enlargement.
The morphologic features of mild and moderate HDV include:
- Perivascular inflammatory cells,
- +/-Vascular thrombosis,
- Smooth muscle hypertrophy, and
- Endothelial hyperplasia.
Severe HDV is characterized by:
- Atherosis - foamy macrophages within vascular wall, and
- Fibrinoid necrosis of vessel wall (amorphous eosinophilic vessel wall).
A number of conditions may cause the appearance of livedo reticularis:
- Cutis marmorata telangiectatica congenita, a rare congenital condition
- Sneddon syndrome – association of livedoid vasculitis and systemic vascular disorders, such as strokes, due to underlying genetic cause
- Idiopathic livedo reticularis – the most common form of livedo reticularis, completely benign condition of unknown cause affecting mostly young women during the winter: It is a lacy purple appearance of skin in extremities due to sluggish venous blood flow. It may be mild, but ulceration may occur later in the summer.
- Secondary livedo reticularis:
- Vasculitis autoimmune conditions:
- Livedoid vasculitis – with painful ulceration occurring in the lower legs
- Polyarteritis nodosa
- Systemic lupus erythematosus
- Dermatomyositis
- Rheumatoid arthritis
- Lymphoma
- Pancreatitis
- Chronic pancreatitis
- Tuberculosis
- Drug-related:
- Adderall (side effect)
- Amantadine (side effect)
- Bromocriptine (side effect)
- Beta IFN treatment, "i.e." in multiple sclerosis
- Livedo reticularis associated with rasagiline
- Methylphenidate and dextroamphetamine-induced peripheral vasculopathy
- Gefitinib
- Obstruction of capillaries:
- Cryoglobulinaemia – proteins in the blood that clump together in cold conditions
- Antiphospholipid syndrome due to small blood clots
- Hypercalcaemia (raised blood calcium levels which may be deposited in the capillaries)
- Haematological disorders of polycythaemia rubra vera or thrombocytosis (excessive red cells or platelets)
- Infections (syphilis, tuberculosis, Lyme disease)
- Associated with acute renal failure due to cholesterol emboli status after cardiac catheterization
- Arteriosclerosis (cholesterol emboli) and homocystinuria (due to Chromosome 21 autosomal recessive Cystathionine beta synthase deficiency)
- Intra-arterial injection (especially in drug addicts)
- Ehlers-Danlos syndrome – connective tissue disorder, often with many secondary conditions, may be present in all types
- Pheochromocytoma
- Livedoid vasculopathy and its association with factor V Leiden mutation
- FILS syndrome (polymerase ε1 mutation in a human syndrome with facial dysmorphism, immunodeficiency, livedo, and short stature)
- Primary hyperoxaluria, oxalosis (oxalate vasculopathy)
- Cytomegalovirus infection (very rare clinical form, presenting with persistent fever and livedo reticularis on the extremities and cutaneous necrotizing vasculitis of the toes)
- Generalized livedo reticularis induced by silicone implants for soft tissue augmentation
- As a rare skin finding in children with Down syndrome
- Idiopathic livedo reticularis with polyclonal IgM hypergammopathy
- CO angiography (rare, reported case)
- A less common skin lesion of Churg-Strauss syndrome
- Erythema nodosum-like cutaneous lesions of sarcoidosis showing livedoid changes in a patient with sarcoidosis and Sjögren's syndrome
- Livedo vasculopathy associated with IgM antiphosphatidylserine-prothrombin complex antibody
- Livedo vasculopathy associated with plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 promoter homozygosity and prothrombin G20210A heterozygosity
- As a first sign of metastatic breast carcinoma (very rare)
- Livedo reticularis associated with renal cell carcinoma (rare)
- Buerger's disease (as an initial symptom)
- As a rare manifestation of Graves hyperthyroidism
- Associated with pernicious anaemia
- Moyamoya disease (a rare, chronic cerebrovascular occlusive disease of unknown cause, characterized by progressive stenosis of the arteries of the circle of Willis leading to an abnormal capillary network and resultant ischemic strokes or cerebral hemorrhages)
- Associated with the use of a midline catheter
- Familial primary cryofibrinogenemia.
Livedo reticularis is a common skin finding consisting of a mottled reticulated vascular pattern that appears as a lace-like purplish discoloration of the skin. The discoloration is caused by swelling of the venules owing to obstruction of capillaries by small blood clots. The blood clots in the small blood vessels can be a secondary effect of a condition that increases a person's risk of forming blood clots, including a wide array of pathological and nonpathological conditions . Examples include hyperlipidemia, microvascular hematological or anemia states, nutritional deficiencies, hyper- and autoimmune diseases, and drugs/toxins.
The condition may be normal or related to more severe underlying pathology. Its differential diagnosis is broadly divided into possible blood diseases, autoimmune (rheumatologic) diseases, cardiovascular diseases, cancers, and endocrine disorders. It can usually (in 80% of cases) be diagnosed by biopsy.
It may be aggravated by exposure to cold, and occurs most often in the lower extremities.
The condition's name derives from the Latin "livere" meaning bluish and "reticular" which refers to the net-like appearance.
The exact cause of lipodermatosclerosis is unknown. Venous disease, such as venous incompetence, venous hypertension, and body mass ("obesity") may be relevant to the underlying pathogenesis.
Increased blood pressure in the veins (venous hypertension) can cause diffusion of substances, including fibrin, out of capillaries. Fibrotic tissue may predispose the tissue to ulceration. Recurrent ulceration and fat necrosis is associated with lipodermatosclerosis. In advanced lipodermatosclerosis the proximal leg swells from chronic venous obstruction and the lower leg shrinks from chronic ulceration and fat necrosis resulting in the inverted coke bottle appearance of the lower leg.
Lipodermatosclerosis is most commonly diagnosed in middle-aged women.
The origin of lipodermatosclerosis is probably multifactorial, involving tissue hypoxia, leakage of proteins into the interstitium, and leukocyte activation. Studies of patients with lipodermatosclerosis have demonstrated significantly decreased concentrations of cutaneous oxygen associated with decreased capillary density. Capillaries are virtually absent in areas of fibrotic scars, leading to a condition known as atrophie blanche or livedoid vasculopathy.
Autosomal Dominant Retinal Vasculopathy with Cerebral Leukodystrophy (AD-RVCL) (previously known also as Cerebroretinal Vasculopathy, CRV, or Hereditary Vascular Retinopathy, HVR or Hereditary Endotheliopathy, Retinopathy, Nephropathy, and Stroke, HERNS) is an inherited condition resulting from a frameshift mutation to the TREX1 gene. This genetically inherited condition affects the retina and the white matter of the central nervous system, resulting in vision loss, lacunar strokes and ultimately dementia. Symptoms commonly begin in the early to mid-forties, and treatments currently aim to manage or alleviate the symptoms rather than treating the underlying cause. The overall prognosis is poor, and death can sometimes occur within 10 years of the first symptoms appearing.
AD-RVCL (CRV) Acronym
Autosomal Dominance (genetics) means only one copy of the gene is necessary for the symptoms to manifest themselves.
Retinal Vasculopathy means a disorder that is associated with a disease of the blood vessels in the retina.
Cerebral means having to do with the brain.
Leukodystrophy means a degeneration of the white matter of the brain.
Pathogenesis
The main pathologic process centers on small blood vessels that prematurely “drop out” and disappear. The retina of the eye and white matter of the brain are the most sensitive to this pathologic process. Over a five to ten-year period, this vasculopathy (blood vessel pathology) results in vision loss and destructive brain lesions with neurologic deficits and death.
Most recently, AD-RVCL (CRV) has been renamed. The new name is CHARIOT which stands for Cerebral Hereditary Angiopathy with vascular Retinopathy and Impaired Organ function caused by TREX1 mutations.
Treatment
Currently, there is no therapy to prevent the blood vessel deterioration.
About TREX1
The official name of the TREX1 gene is “three prime repair exonuclease 1.” The normal function of the TREX1 gene is to provide instructions for making the 3-prime repair exonuclease 1 enzyme. This enzyme is a DNA exonuclease, which means it trims molecules of DNA by removing DNA building blocks (nucleotides) from the ends of the molecules. In this way, it breaks down unneeded DNA molecules or fragments that may be generated during genetic material in preparation for cell division, DNA repair, cell death, and other processes.
Changes (mutations) to the TREX1 gene can result in a range of conditions one of which is AD-RVCL. The mutations to the TREX1 gene are believed to prevent the production of the 3-prime repair exonuclease 1 enzyme. Researchers suggest that the absence of this enzyme may result in an accumulation of unneeded DNA and RNA in cells. These DNA and RNA molecules may be mistaken by cells for those of viral invaders, triggering immune system reactions that result in the symptoms of AD-RVCL.
Mutations in the TREX1 gene have also been identified in people with other disorders involving the immune system. These disorders include a chronic inflammatory disease called systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), including a rare form of SLE called chilblain lupus that mainly affects the skin.
The TREX1 gene is located on chromosome 3: base pairs 48,465,519 to 48,467,644
The immune system.
- The immune system is composed of white blood cells or leukocytes.
- There are 5 different types of leukocytes.
- Combined, the 5 different leukocytes represent the 2 types of immune systems (The general or innate immune system and the adaptive or acquired immune system).
- The adaptive immune system is composed of two types of cells (B-cells which release antibodies and T-cells which destroy abnormal and cancerous cells).
How the immune system becomes part of the condition.
During mitosis, tiny fragments of “scrap” single strand DNA naturally occur inside the cell. Enzymes find and destroy the “scrap” DNA. The TREX1 gene provides the information necessary to create the enzyme that destroys this single strand “scrap” DNA. A mutation in the TREX1 gene causes the enzyme that would destroy the single strand DNA to be less than completely effective. The less than completely effective nature of the enzyme allows “scrap” single strand DNA to build up in the cell. The buildup of “scrap” single strand DNA alerts the immune system that the cell is abnormal.
The abnormality of the cells with the high concentration of “scrap” DNA triggers a T-cell response and the abnormal cells are destroyed. Because the TREX1 gene is identical in all of the cells in the body the ineffective enzyme allows the accumulation of “scrap” single strand DNA in all of the cells in the body. Eventually, the immune system has destroyed enough of the cells in the walls of the blood vessels that the capillaries burst open. The capillary bursting happens throughout the body but is most recognizable when it happens in the eyes and brain because these are the two places where capillary bursting has the most pronounced effect.
Characteristics of AD-RVCL
- No recognizable symptoms until after age 40.
- No environmental toxins have been found to be attributable to the condition.
- The condition is primarily localized to the brain and eyes.
- Optically correctable, but continuous, deterioration of visual acuity due to extensive multifocal microvascular abnormalities and retinal neovascularization leading, ultimately, to a loss of vision.
- Elevated levels of alkaline phosphatase.
- Subtle vascular changes in the retina resembling telangiectasia (spider veins) in the parafovea circulation.
- Bilateral capillary occlusions involving the perifovea vessels as well as other isolated foci of occlusion in the posterior pole of the retina.
- Headaches due to papilledema.
- Mental confusion, loss of cognitive function, loss of memory, slowing of speech and hemiparesis due to “firm masses” and white, granular, firm lesions in the brain.
- Jacksonian seizures and grand mal seizure disorder.
- Progressive neurologic deterioration unresponsive to systemic corticosteroid therapy.
- Discrete, often confluent, foci of coagulation necrosis in the cerebral white matter with intermittent findings of fine calcium deposition within the necrotic foci.
- Vasculopathic changes involving both arteries and veins of medium and small caliber present in the cerebral white matter.
- Fibroid necrosis of vessel walls with extravasation of fibrinoid material into adjacent parenchyma present in both necrotic and non-necrotic tissue.
- Obliterative fibrosis in all the layers of many vessel walls.
- Parivascular, adventitial fibrosis with limited intimal thickening.
Conditions with similar symptoms that AD-RVCL can be misdiagnosed as:
- Brain tumors
- Diabetes
- Macular degeneration
- Telangiectasia (Spider veins)
- Hemiparesis (Stroke)
- Glaucoma
- Hypertension (high blood pressure)
- Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE (same original pathogenic gene, but definitely a different disease because of a different mutation in TREX1))
- Polyarteritis nodosa
- Granulomatosis with polyangiitis
- Behçet's disease
- Lymphomatoid granulomatosis
- Vasculitis
Clinical Associations
- Raynaud's phenomenon
- Anemia
- Hypertension
- Normocytic anemia
- Normochromic anemia
- Gastrointestinal bleeding or telangiectasias
- Elevated alkaline phosphatase
Definitions
- Coagulation necrosis
- Endothelium
- Fibrinoid
- Fibrinoid necrosis
- Frameshift mutation
- Hemiparesis
- Jacksonian seizure
- Necrotic
- Necrosis
- Papilledema
- Perivascular
- Retinopathy
- Telangiectasia
- Vasculopathy
- Vascular
What AD-RVCL is not:
- Infection
- Cancer
- Diabetes
- Glaucoma
- Hypertension
- A neurological disorder
- Muscular dystrophy
- Systemic Lupus Erythematosis (SLE)
- Vasculitis
Things that have been tried but turned out to be ineffective or even make things worse:
- Antibiotics
- Steroids
- X-Ray therapy
- Immunosuppression
History of AD-RVCL (CRV)
- 1985 – 1988: CRV (Cerebral Retinal Vasculopathy) was discovered by John P. Atkinson, MD at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, MO
- 1988: 10 families worldwide were identified as having CRV
- 1991: Related disease reported, HERNS (Hereditary Endiotheliopathy with Retinopathy, Nephropathy and Stroke – UCLA
- 1998: Related disease reported, HRV (Hereditary Retinal Vasculopathy) – Leiden University, Netherlands
- 2001: Localized to Chromosome 3.
- 2007: The specific genetic defect in all of these families was discovered in a single gene called TREX1
- 2008: Name changed to AD-RVCL Autosomal Dominant-Retinal Vasculopathy with Cerebral Leukodystrophy
- 2009: Testing for the disease available to persons 21 and older
- 2011: 20 families worldwide were identified as having CRV
- 2012: Obtained mouse models for further research and to test therapeutic agents
It can be diagnosed by histomorphologic examination of the placenta and is characterized by fetal vessel thrombosis and clustered fibrotic chorionic villi without blood vessels.
Fetal thrombotic vasculopathy is a chronic disorder characterized by thrombosis in the fetus leading to vascular obliteration and hypoperfusion.
It is associated with cerebral palsy and stillbirth.
Lipodermatosclerosis (also known as "chronic panniculitis with lipomembranous changes", "hypodermitis sclerodermiformis", "sclerosing panniculitis", and "stasis panniculitis") is a skin and connective tissue disease. It is a form of lower extremity panniculitis, an inflammation of the layer of fat under the epidermis.
A placental infarction results from the interruption of blood supply to a part of the placenta, causing its cells to die.
Small placental infarcts, especially at the edge of the placental disc, are considered to be normal at term. Large placental infarcts are associated with vascular abnormalities, e.g. hypertrophic decidual vasculopathy, as seen in hypertension. Very large infarcts lead to placental insufficiency and may result in fetal death.
Livedoid vasculopathy (also known as "livedoid vasculitis", "livedo reticularis with summer/winter ulceration" and "segmental hyalinizing vasculitis") is a chronic cutaneous disease seen predominantly in young to middle-aged women. One synonym used to describe its features is "Painful purpuric ulcers with pattern of the lower extremities" (PURPLE).
It can be divided into a primary (or idiopathic) form and a secondary form, which has been associated with a number of diseases, including chronic venous hypertension and varicosities.
"Maternal floor infarcts" are "not" considered to be true placental infarcts, as they result from deposition of fibrin around the chorionic villi, i.e. perivillous fibrin deposition.
Mechanical tension on a wound has been identified as a leading cause for hypertrophic scar formation.
When a normal wound heals, the body produces new collagen fibres at a rate which balances the breakdown of old collagen. Hypertrophic scars are red and thick and may be itchy or painful. They do not extend beyond the boundary of the original wound, but may continue to thicken for up to six months. They usually improve over one or two years, but may cause distress due to their appearance or the intensity of the itching; they can also restrict movement if they are located close to a joint.
Some people have an inherited tendency to this type of scarring, for example, those with Ehlers–Danlos syndrome, classic type. It is not possible to completely prevent hypertrophic scars, so those with a history of them should inform their doctor or surgeon if they need surgery. Scar therapies may speed up the process of change from a hypertrophic scar to a flatter, paler one.
The Registry has been enrolling new patients from participating institutions that are member of the Congenital Heart Surgeons' Society. Hospitals from across North America continue to join the study group and enroll patients. Over 140 patients with AAOCA have been enrolled by June 2011, making it the largest cohort ever assembled of this anomaly.
A hypertrophic scar is a cutaneous condition characterized by deposits of excessive amounts of collagen which gives rise to a raised scar, but not to the degree observed with keloids. Like keloids, they form most often at the sites of pimples, body piercings, cuts and burns. They often contain nerves and blood vessels. They generally develop after thermal or traumatic injury that involves the deep layers of the dermis and express high levels of TGF-β.
Eales disease most commonly affects healthy young adults. Male predominance (up to 97.6%) has been reported in a majority of the series. The predominant age of onset of symptoms is between 20 and 30 years. The disease is now seen more commonly in the Indian subcontinent.
Hypertrophy (, from Greek ὑπέρ "excess" + τροφή "nourishment") is the increase in the volume of an organ or tissue due to the enlargement of its component cells. It is distinguished from hyperplasia, in which the cells remain approximately the same size but increase in number. Although hypertrophy and hyperplasia are two distinct processes, they frequently occur together, such as in the case of the hormonally-induced proliferation and enlargement of the cells of the uterus during pregnancy.
Eccentric hypertrophy is a type of hypertrophy where the walls and chamber of a hollow organ undergo growth in which the overall size and volume are enlarged. It is applied especially to the left ventricle of heart. Sarcomeres are added in series, as for example in dilated cardiomyopathy (in contrast to hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, a type of concentric hypertrophy, where sarcomeres are added in parallel).
Anomalous origin of the right coronary artery originating from the pulmonary trunk (ARCAPA) is a rare but potentially fatal anomaly. The goal of surgical therapy is establishment of a physiologic bi-coronary circulation.
The cause of this condition is not known. However, in a significant number of patients, DNA of the bacterium "Mycobacterium tuberculosis" was detected by PCR.
Lhermitte–Duclos disease is a rare entity; approximately 222 cases of LDD have been reported in medical literature. Symptoms of the disease most commonly manifest in the third and fourth decades of life, although it may onset at any age. Men and women are equally affected, and there is not any apparent geographical pattern.
Necrotizing vasculitis also called Systemic necrotizing vasculitus (SNV) is a category of vasculitis, comprising vasculitides that present with necrosis.
Examples include giant cell arteritis, microscopic polyangiitis, and granulomatosis with polyangiitis.
ICD-10 uses the variant "necrotizing vasculopathy". ICD-9, while classifying these conditions together, doesn't use a dedicated phrase, instead calling them "polyarteritis nodosa and allied conditions".
When using the influential classification known as the "Chapel Hill Consensus Conference", the terms "systemic vasculitis" or "primary systemic vasculitides" are commonly used. Although the word "necrotizing" is omitted, the conditions described are largely the same.
Vasculitis secondary to connective tissue disorders. Usually secondary to systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), rheumatoid arthritis (RA), relapsing polychondritis, Behçet's disease, and other connective tissue disorders.
Vasculitis secondary to viral infection. Usually due to hepatitis B and C, HIV, cytomegalovirus, Epstein-Barr virus, and Parvo B19 virus.
A tufted angioma (also known as an "Acquired tufted angioma," "Angioblastoma," "Angioblastoma of Nakagawa," "Hypertrophic hemangioma," "Progressive capillary hemangioma," and "Tufted hemangioma") usually develops in infancy or early childhood on the neck and upper trunk, and is an ill-defined, dull red macule with a mottled appearance, varying from 2 to 5 cm in diameter.
Susac's syndrome (retinocochleocerebral vasculopathy) is a very rare form of microangiopathy characterized by encephalopathy, branch retinal artery occlusions and hearing loss. The cause is unknown but the current thinking is that antibodies are produced against endothelial cells in tiny arteries which leads to damage and the symptoms related to the illness. Despite this being an extremely rare disease, there are 4 registries collecting data on the illness; two are in the United States, one is in Germany and the fourth is in Portugal.
The average age of onset is 40 to 60 years, and men are affected more often than women. Adults with Ménétrier disease have a higher risk of developing gastric adenocarcinoma.