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Updated: Mar 23 2020

Sarcoidosis

  • Snapshot
    • A previously healthy 30-year-old African American woman has fatigue, arthralgia, and a nodular rash over the trunk and upper extremities for three weeks. There are twelve 3-8 mm, pale, indurated plaques over the chest, back, and upper extremities. The liver is palpable 2 cm below the right costal margin with a percussion span of 14 cm, and the spleen tip is palpable 3 cm below the left costal margin. There is no pain or limitation of any of the joints. A chest radiograph shows bilateral lymphadenopathy.
  • Introduction
    • Idiopathic condition characterized by granulmomatous inflammation of multiple organs
      • lungs most commonly involved organ
      • commonly causes restrictive lung disease
        • may also cause obstructive or mixed pattern
      • mediated by CD4 TH cells
        • ↑ IFN-gamma
      • granulomas can affect all organ systems
        • liver/spleen
        • bone
        • heart
    • Epidemiology
      • most common in black females
      • smoking does not ↑ risk
      • presents most commonly in 3rd or 4th decade
    • Associated conditions
      • diabetes insipidus (granulomatous infiltration of posterior pituitary)
  • Presentation
    • Symptoms
      • may be asymptomatic
        • 50% as incidental chest radiograph findings
      • cough
      • fever, malaise
      • arthritis
        • symptoms mainly in the ankle and legs
      • can be GRUELING
        • Granulomas
        • Rheumatoid arthritis
        • Uveitis
        • Erythema nodosum
        • Lymphadenopahy
        • Interstitial fibrosis
        • Negative TB
        • Gammaglobulinemia
    • Physical exam
      • skin lesions
        • nodular granulomatous lesions
        • facial rash
        • erthyma nodosum
          • painful nodules
          • also seen in rheumatic fever
      • eye lesions
        • uveitis
          • ↓ vision and glaucoma
      • enlarged salivary and lacrimal glands
  • Evaluation
    • Diagnosis is clinical and often one of exclusion
    • Chest radiograph
      • bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy
      • lungs involved in 90% of the cases
    • Labs
      • serum ACE (not uniformly)
      • hypercalcemia
        • ↑ 1-α-hydroxylase → hypervitaminosis D
          • can cause hypercalemia and renal failure chronically
        • commonly tested, less commonly seen (only about 11%)
      • serum protein electrophoresis (SPE) shows polyclonal gammopathy
      • lack of response to CD4 TH skin tests (like PPD) due to ↑ lung activity and ↓ systemic activity
    • Pulmonary function tests
      • restrictive pattern is common (normal FEV1/FVC with normal TLC)
        • however, obstructive or mixed pattern may also be seen
    • Bronchoalveolar lavage
      • high CD4:CD8 T-cell ratio
        • due to CD4 infiltrate into the interstitium as well as intralveolar space
        • contrasted to the low ratio in hypersensitivity pneumonitis and HIV
    • Biopsy
      • noncaseating granulomas with multinucleated giant cells
        • very suggestive of sarcoidosis
      • laminated calcium concretions present (cause of density on CXR)
  • Treatment
    • Conservative
      • observationfine in most cases
        • majority experience remission within two years without treatment
    • Pharmacologic
      • topical preferred when possible (skin, eyes, nasal, airway, etc)
      • corticosteroids
      • indications
        • extra-pulmonary manifestations: cardiac, neurologic, or uveitis
        • symptomatic hepatosplenomegaly
        • significant hypercalcemia
        • only if refractory to observations
  • Prognosis
    • Relapsing/remitting course with 50% resolving spontaneously
    • Progression
      • Stage I - bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy
      • Stage II - bilateral hilar lymphadenopathy + upper lobe infiltrates
      • Stage III - lung infiltrates only
      • Stage IV - lung fibrosis
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