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[Vasculitis and vasculopathy].

Many pathophysiological process components are known to be implicated in lower limb ulcerations, among which vascular lesions have a major role. Vasculitis denotes a heterogeneous group of clinical entities which all are characterized by the inflammatory process of arterial and venous walls of any size and in any organ, quite frequently in the skin. Vasculopathy, on the other hand, refers to vascular and capillary lesions caused by, for example, some medications. The classification of vasculitides according to the size of the blood vessels involved serves for proper understanding the issue among clinicians and researchers, and not as a diagnostic tool. According to histologic finding obtained by examination of blood vessel biopsy specimen, vasculitides are divided into three groups: lymphocytic, leukocytoclastic and granulomatous. Livedoid vasculitis (livedo reticularis) most commonly affects women and is generally localized on lower extremities. The etiology oflivedoid vasculitis may imply autoimmune diseases, capillary obstruction with cryoglobulins, or antiphospholipid syndrome. Livedoid vasculopathy is a hyalinization disease of the vasculature, with thromboses and ulcerations on lower extremities, and of unknown etiology. Livedoid vasculopathy has been singled out as a separate disease that usually does not occur consequentially to other primary diseases. Livedoid vasculopathy typically affects women (71%) at a mean age of 45 (range 10-85) years; bilateral involvement of both lower limbs is present in 80.8%, disease manifested with ulcerations in 68.9%, ulcerations followed by development of atrophie blanche in 71.1%, transcutaneous oximetry reduction is found in 74.1%, factor V mutation (Leiden heterozygotes) in 22.2%, reduced protein C activity in 13.3%, prothrombin gene mutation (G20210A) in 8.3%, positive lupus anticoagulant in 17.9%, positive anticardiolipin antibodies in 28.6%, and elevated homocysteine level in 14.3% cases; blood vessel histology shows intraluminal thrombosis in 97.8% of patients, while direct immunofluorescence of blood vessel specimen shows immunoglobulins and complement components in blood vessels on the surface, in the mid-dermis as well as deep in the dermis. The immunofluorescence pattern differs from that found in immune complex diseases. Some of the agents tried in the treatment of livedoid vasculopathy include pentoxifylline, low-molecular heparin, hyperbaric oxygen therapy, methylprednisolone i.v. with pentoxifylline, recombinant tissue plasminogen activator, intravenous immunoglobulins, phenformin (biguanide) and ethylestrenol (anabolic steroid) combination, warfarin, heparin, systemic photochemotherapy (PUVA with oral psoralen), and low-molecular dextran. Infected ulcerations are treated with antibiotics. Combined therapy with folic acid, vitamin B12 and vitamin B6 can also be used.

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