What are some diseases that have both skin and renal manifestations? |
Table 38-3. Diseases with Both Skin and Renal Manifestations | |||||||
DISEASE | PATHOGENESIS | CUTANEOUS FINDINGS | ASSOCIATED SYSTEMIC FINDINGS | ||||
Systemic sclerosis | Autoimmune disease involving anti–Scl-70, anticentromere, and other antinuclear antibodies resulting in progressive sclerosis of skin and internal organs | Scleroderma, morphea, sclerodactyly, telangiectatic mats, calcinosis cutis, Raynaud’s syndrome | Internal organ involvement is frequent and may affect the esophagus, heart and kidneys; lung involvement is the leading cause of death | ||||
Primary systemic amyloidosis (accumulation of amyloid fibrils within vital organs leads to atrophy of normal tissue and interferes with the normal functioning of the organ) | Deposits of immunoglobulin light chain (AL), or, less often, heavy chain (HL), around vessels and functional units of skin and internal organs | Pinch purpura; petechiae and ecchymosis around eyelids, neck, axilla, and anus; waxy or purpuric papules, nodules, or plaques on face, neck, scalp, and digits; hemorrhagic blisters Mucosa: macroglossia | Renal proteinuria and failure, hypoalbuminemia, edema, cardiac failure (congestive heart failure), neurologic deficits (peripheral and autonomic neuropathy), gastrointestinal (motility problems) | ||||
Secondary systemic amyloidosis (accumulation of amyloid fibrils within vital organs leads to atrophy of normal tissue and interferes with the normal functioning of the organ) | Deposits of amyloid A protein (AA) (chronic inflammatory diseases and hereditary periodic fever syndromes); deposits of β2 microglobulin (patients with chronic renal failure receiving hemodialysis) | No, or rare, cutaneous findings, but skin often biopsied for diagnosis (abdominal fat pad, minor salivary gland, rectal mucosa, buccal mucosa, tongue) | AA amyloidosis usually affects the kidneys, liver, spleen, adrenals and heart; synovial deposits of b2 microglobulin: carpal tunnel syndrome, bone cysts and destructive spondyloarthropathy | ||||
Tuberous sclerosis (Bourneville disease) Epiloia (epilepsy, low intelligence, angiofibroma) | TSC1 (chromosome 9q34) and TSC2 (chromosome 16p13); their protein products are hamartin and tuberin, respectively, which are integral to cell cycle and growth regulation | Skin: congenital hypopigmented macules (ash leaf macules), confettilike hypopigmentation, facial angiofibromas, collagenomas (Shagreen patch), periungual fibromas, café-au-lait macules; mucosa: gingival fibromas and dental enamel pits | Hamartomas can be found in the eye, brain, kidneys, liver, heart, lungs, and bones, sometimes progressing to malignancy; seizures, mental deficits and neuropsychiatric disturbances are common | ||||
Nail-patella syndrome (hereditary osteoonychodysplasia) | LMX1B gene: regulates collagen synthesis Dysregulation of the synthesis of collagen in the glomerular basement membrane may contribute to the nephrosis | Hypoplasia of radial side of thumbnails, triangular lunula, absent or hypoplastic nails | Absent or hypoplastic patella, radial head dysplasia, iliac crest exostosis (iliac horns); nephropathy and renal insufficiency | ||||
Birt-Hogg-Dube Syndrome | FLCN (BHD) gene encodes the tumor suppressor protein folliculin | Fibrofolliculomas, trichodiscomas, and acrochordons | Lung cysts, spontaneous pneumothorax, and renal tumors (oncocytomas and chromophobe renal cell carcinoma); colon polyps; neural tumors | ||||
Hereditary leiomyomatosis and renal cell cancer (HLRCC) | FH gene: fumarate hydratase enzyme activity decreased | Multiple cutaneous leiomyomata or single leiomyoma with positive family history | Uterine leiomyomata (fibroids) and renal tumors |
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