Allergic Angiitis and Granulomatosis
- 1 March 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of internal medicine (1960)
- Vol. 138 (3) , 367-371
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archinte.1978.03630270021012
Abstract
Two patients with acute, rapidly progressive generalized vasculitis initially had symptoms of asthma. Progressive increase in severity of asthma was followed by systemic disease, including pulmonary infiltrative disease, mononeuritis multiplex, and abdominal pain. Examination of the tissues demonstrated vasculitis with eosinophilia, and clinically both cases appeared in a near terminal state. High-dose prednisone did not induce a remission. In particular, the lesions of mononeuritis multiplex progressed after initiation of high-dose prednisone. The addition of azathioprine to the regimen was followed by a gradual and then complete remission of clinical and laboratory abnormalities, except for some residual nerve damage and asthma of varying severity in the two patients. These two patients, whose cases are classified as the allergic granulomatosis variant of polyarteritis nodosa, have had a remission of seven and almost two years, respectively, after combined prednisoneazathioprine therapy. (Arch Intern Med138:367-371, 1978)This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Long-term follow-up study of periarteritis nodosaThe American Journal of Medicine, 1967
- POLYARTERITIS NODOSAQJM: An International Journal of Medicine, 1957