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  2. Vasculitis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vasculitis

    The definite diagnosis of vasculitis is established after a biopsy of involved organ or tissue, such as skin, sinuses, lung, nerve, brain, and kidney. The biopsy elucidates the pattern of blood vessel inflammation. Some types of vasculitis display leukocytoclasis, which is vascular damage caused by nuclear debris from infiltrating neutrophils. [37]

  3. Cerebral vasculitis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cerebral_vasculitis

    Cerebral vasculitis (sometimes the word angiitis is used instead of "vasculitis") is vasculitis (inflammation of the blood vessel wall) involving the brain and occasionally the spinal cord. [1] It affects all of the vessels: very small blood vessels ( capillaries ), medium-size blood vessels ( arterioles and venules ), or large blood vessels ...

  4. Systemic vasculitis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Systemic_vasculitis

    Necrotizing vasculitis, also called systemic necrotizing vasculitis, [1] is a general term for the inflammation of veins and arteries that develops into necrosis and narrows the vessels. [ 2 ] Tumors , medications, allergic reactions , and infectious organisms are some of the recognized triggers for these conditions, even though the precise ...

  5. Cutaneous small-vessel vasculitis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cutaneous_small-vessel...

    Small vessel cutaneous vasculitis is a diagnosis of exclusion and requires ruling out systemic causes of the skin findings. [14] Skin biopsy (punch or excisional) is the most definitive diagnostic test and should be performed with 48 hours of appearance of the vasculitis. [ 6 ]

  6. Chapel Hill Consensus Conference - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chapel_Hill_Consensus...

    Single Organ Vasculitis (SOV) Cutaneous leukocytoclastic angiitis; cutaneous arteritis; primary central nervous system vasculitis; isolated aortitis; others Vasculitis associated with systemic disease: Lupus vasculitis; Rheumatoid vasculitis; Sarcoid vasculitis; others Vasculitis associated with probable etiology

  7. Cryoglobulinemic vasculitis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cryoglobulinemic_vasculitis

    Cryoglobulinemic vasculitis is a form of inflammation affecting the blood vessels caused by the deposition of abnormal proteins called cryoglobulins. These immunoglobulin proteins are soluble at normal body temperatures, but become insoluble below 37 °C (98.6 °F) and subsequently may aggregate within smaller blood vessels.

  8. Granulomatosis with polyangiitis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Granulomatosis_with...

    According to the Chapel Hill Consensus Conference (CHCC) on the nomenclature of systemic vasculitis (1992), establishing the diagnosis of GPA demands: [22] a granulomatous inflammation involving the respiratory tract, and; a vasculitis of small to medium-size vessels. Several investigators have compared the ACR and Chapel Hill criteria. [23]

  9. Urticarial vasculitis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urticarial_vasculitis

    Urticarial vasculitis (also known as "chronic urticaria as a manifestation of venulitis", "hypocomplementemic urticarial vasculitis syndrome", "hypocomplementemic vasculitis" and "unusual lupus-like syndrome") [1] is a skin condition characterized by fixed urticarial lesions that appear histologically as a vasculitis. [2]: 834