Scleromyositis

Scleromyositis or the PM/Scl overlap syndrome is a complex autoimmune disease (a disease in which the immune system attacks the body). Patients with scleromyositis have symptoms of both systemic scleroderma and either polymyositis or dermatomyositis, and is therefore considered an overlap syndrome. Although it is a rare disease, it is one of the more common overlap syndromes seen in scleroderma patients, together with MCTD and Antisynthetase syndrome. Autoantibodies often found in these patients are the anti-PM/Scl (anti-exosome) antibodies.[1]

The symptoms that are seen most often are typical symptoms of the individual autoimmune diseases and include Raynaud's phenomenon, arthritis, myositis and scleroderma.[2] Treatment of these patients is therefore strongly dependent on the exact symptoms with which a patient reports to a physician and is similar to treatment for the individual autoimmune disease, often involving either immunosuppressive or immunomodulating drugs.[3]

Symptoms

Symptoms vary but they mostly involve skin disorders. The signs to look for include Raynaud's phenomenon, arthritis, myositis and scleroderma. Visual symptoms include discoloring of the skin and painful swelling.

Mechanism

Scleroderma overlap syndrome: Scleroderma is a connective tissue disease that causes fibrosis and vascular abnormalities, but that also has an autoimmune component. It is described by connective tissues complications. Blood testing includes screening for the positive antinuclear antibody. Patients have symptoms of both systemic scleroderma and/or polymyositis and dermatomyositis.

  1. Scleroderma: a group of rare diseases that involve the hardening and tightening of the skin and connective tissues

and/or:

Polymyositis: a rare inflammatory disease that causes muscle weakness affecting both sides of your body

Dermatomyositis: an inflammatory disease of skin and muscle marked especially by muscular weakness and skin rash.

Diagnosis

Patient should seek a physician for skin tests. Typically, after a consultation with rheumatologist, the disease will be diagnosed. A dermatologist is also another specialist that can diagnose. Blood studies and numerous other specialized tests depending upon which organs are affected.

Cause & Prevention

Treatment & Prognosis

There is no currently cure the only way to treat this disease is by treating symptoms. Commonly patients are prescribed immunosuppressive drugs. Another route would be to take collagen regulation drugs.

Recent Research

  1. Recent studies show Vitamin R Therapy in treating this class of overlap syndromes.[4]
  2. There is still unanswered question of which antibodies will best treat connective tissue diseases.[5]

3) In some cases scleromyositis can also attack organs.[6]

References

  1. Jablonska S. and Blaszczyk M. (1999). "Scleroderma overlap syndromes". Adv Exp Med Biol 455: 85–92. doi:10.1007/978-1-4615-4857-7_12. PMID 10599327.
  2. Mahler, M. and Raijmakers R. (2007). "Novel aspects of autoantibodies to the PM/Scl complex: Clinical, genetic and diagnostic insights". Autoimmunity Reviews 6 (7): 432–7. doi:10.1016/j.autrev.2007.01.013. PMID 17643929.
  3. Jablonska S. and Blaszczyk M. (1998). "Scleromyositis: a scleroderma/polymyositis overlap syndrome". Clinical Rheumatology 17 (6): 465–7. doi:10.1007/BF01451281. PMID 9890673.
  4. Saw, Jacqui; Leong, Wai; John, Mina; Nolan, David; O'Connor, Kevin (2014). "70: Vitamin R therapy in scleromyositis: A novel approach for a rare disorder". Journal of Clinical Neuroscience 21 (11): 2054–5. doi:10.1016/j.jocn.2014.06.084.
  5. Vandergheynst F, Ocmant A, Sordet C, Humbel RL, Goetz J, Roufosse F, Cogan E, Sibilia J (2006). "Anti-pm/scl antibodies in connective tissue disease: Clinical and biological assessment of 14 patients". Clinical and Experimental Rheumatology 24 (2): 129–33. PMID 16762146.
  6. http://www.atsjournals.org/doi/abs/10.1164/ajrccm-conference.2013.187.1_MeetingAbstracts.A5790

External links


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