摩洛哥儿童青少年皮肌炎伴假性血管神经性水肿的抗SAE抗体:病例报告。

IF 2.8 3区 医学 Q1 PEDIATRICS
Khalila Nainia, Mohamed Amine Aouzal, Imane Ouafik, Mariyam Charhbili, Amal Bouchhab, Abdellatif Daoudi, Samira Tizki, Radia Chakiri
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:幼年皮肌炎(JDM)是儿童非感染性炎症性肌病的主要病因。它是一组异质性自身免疫性疾病,其特征是肌肉、皮肤和内脏受累的不同组合。肌炎特异性自身抗体有助于确定具有共同临床特征和预后的同质亚组。抗SAE(小泛素样修饰酶1(SUMO-1)激活酶)抗体是最近发现的特异性自身抗体之一。这种抗体的出现非常罕见,因此确定幼年型患者的临床特征和预后具有挑战性。我们报告了第一例非洲幼年皮肌炎患者的病例:一名 5 岁 3 个月大的摩洛哥男孩因吞咽困难到儿科急诊就诊,症状已持续两天,两个月前出现面部红斑,伴有乏力、下肢疼痛、行走困难和进行性炎性多关节痛。入院时,患儿口唇出现以假性水肿为主的日光性皮疹、掌周毛细血管扩张、双侧指间关节和跖趾关节出现戈特龙丘疹。患者的下肢近端肌无力更为明显。他没有荨麻疹、发烧、关节炎、钙化、皮肤溃疡或脂肪变性。关节检查和胸肺检查均正常。肌电图显示四肢均有肌源性改变。实验室检查结果显示肌酸磷酸激酶和乳酸脱氢酶水平升高,并伴有轻度炎症综合征。心电图正常。抗SAE抗体呈阳性。男孩被诊断为幼年皮肌炎。他接受了甲基强的松龙注射治疗,随后口服强的松。泼尼松逐渐减量,同时每周肌肉注射甲氨蝶呤。结果,吞咽困难在 48 小时内消失。两周后,肌肉评分有所改善,面部假性水肿明显消退:我们报告了第一例抗SAE自身抗体阳性的JDM非洲患者。结论:我们报告了第一例抗SAE自身抗体阳性的非洲JDM患者,他有典型的JDM皮肤病表现,以嘴唇假性水肿为主;这在DM和JDM患者中很少见。患者对皮质类固醇治疗和甲氨蝶呤反应良好。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Juvenile dermatomyositis with Anti-SAE antibodies in a Moroccan child associated with pseudo-angioedema: a case report.

Background: Juvenile Dermatomyositis (JDM) is the leading cause of non-infectious inflammatory myopathy in children. It is a heterogeneous group of autoimmune diseases characterized by a variable combination of muscular, dermatological, and visceral involvement. Myositis-specific autoantibodies help define homogeneous subgroups with common clinical characteristics and prognoses. Anti-SAE (small ubiquitin-like modifier 1 (SUMO-1) activating enzyme) antibodies are among the most recently discovered specific autoantibodies. The presence of these antibodies is very rare, making it challenging to define clinical features and prognosis in the juvenile form. We report the first case of an African patient with juvenile dermatomyositis and positive anti-SAE antibodies.

Case report: A 5-year-3-month-old Moroccan boy presented to the pediatric emergency department with dysphagia that had been evolving for two days, preceded two months earlier by facial erythema associated with fatigue, lower limb pain, difficulty walking, and progressive inflammatory polyarthralgia. On admission, the child had a heliotrope rash with predominant pseudo-angioedema on the lips, periungual telangiectasia, and Gottron's papules over the bilateral interphalangeal and metatarsophalangeal joints. The patient had a more pronounced proximal muscle weakness in the lower limbs. He had no urticaria, fever, arthritis, calcinosis, cutaneous ulcers, or lipodystrophy. The Joint examination was normal, as was the pleuropulmonary examination. The electroneuromyography showed myogenic changes in all four limbs. Laboratory findings showed elevated levels of creatine phosphokinase and lactate dehydrogenase and a mild inflammatory syndrome. The electrocardiogram was normal. The anti-SAE antibodies were positive. The boy was diagnosed with juvenile dermatomyositis. He received methylprednisolone bolus therapy followed by oral prednisone. The latter was gradually tapered in combination with weekly intramuscular methotrexate. As a result, dysphagia disappeared within 48 h. After two weeks, there was an improvement in the muscular score and a significant regression of facial pseudo-angioedema.

Conclusion: We report the first African patient with anti-SAE autoantibody-positive JDM. He had a typical dermatological manifestation of JDM associated with pseudo-angioedema predominant on the lips; a rarely reported sign in DM and JDM patients. The patient responded well to corticosteroid therapy and methotrexate.

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来源期刊
Pediatric Rheumatology
Pediatric Rheumatology PEDIATRICS-RHEUMATOLOGY
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
8.00%
发文量
95
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Pediatric Rheumatology is an open access, peer-reviewed, online journal encompassing all aspects of clinical and basic research related to pediatric rheumatology and allied subjects. The journal’s scope of diseases and syndromes include musculoskeletal pain syndromes, rheumatic fever and post-streptococcal syndromes, juvenile idiopathic arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, juvenile dermatomyositis, local and systemic scleroderma, Kawasaki disease, Henoch-Schonlein purpura and other vasculitides, sarcoidosis, inherited musculoskeletal syndromes, autoinflammatory syndromes, and others.
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