RESUMO
A case of a 43-year-old male with a history of Graves' disease treated with propylthiouracil was investigated for vasculitis and lymphoproliferative disease. However, his clinical picture was complicated by recurrent episodes of neurological symptoms resembling stroke syndrome, which widened the breadth of the diagnostic workup. Extensive investigations, including imaging and biopsies, excluded other possibilities. The patient was treated as probable cerebral vasculitis after identifying new narrowing in the left middle cerebral artery and was treated with pulsed intravenous methylprednisolone, followed by high-dose oral prednisolone and cyclophosphamide. Repeated brain imaging showed further narrowing of the large vessels, which reaffirmed the likelihood of vasculitis necessitating continuation of induction therapy with further maintenance treatment, which led to stabilization of neurological burden and symptom recovery. This case elucidates complexities in reaching the diagnosis of drug-induced antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA)-associated vasculitis, which can present heterogeneously and mimic other clinical entities such as stroke.
RESUMO
Intra-articular corticosteroid injections (IACI) are commonly used interventions for pain relief in patients with knee osteoarthritis (OA). Biomarkers may be helpful in further elucidating how IACI exert their effect. The aim of this study is to look at the response of biomarkers of cartilage and bone metabolism after IACI in knee OA. Eighty subjects with symptomatic knee OA [45% male, mean age (SD) 64 (11) years] underwent routine knee joint injection with 40 mg triamcinolone acetonide and 4 ml 1% lignocaine. Knee pain (as pain subscale of WOMAC VAS) and biomarkers [C-telopeptides of type-II collagen (uCTX-II), and N-telopeptides of type-I collagen in urine; cartilage oligomeric matrix protein (COMP), hyaluronic acid, N-terminal propeptide of type-IIA collagen, and human cartilage glycoprotein-39 (YKL-40) in serum] were measured at baseline and 3 weeks after IACI. Radiographic severity of disease was evaluated using knee radiographs. Median uCTX-II, a cartilage degradation marker, was lower at 3 weeks post IACI compared with baseline: 306.3 and 349.9 ng/mmol, respectively (p < 0.01), which remained significant after Bonferroni correction. Apart from a weak trend of lower sCOMP post IACI (p = 0.089), other biomarkers showed no change after IACI. Both baseline uCTX-II values and the change in uCTX-II from baseline to 3 weeks post injection correlated with radiographic severity of joint space narrowing, but not osteophyte grade. No association between uCTX-II and pain was observed. This observational study suggests that IACI in knee OA may reduce cartilage degradation in the short term.