IgA vasculitis

Epidemiology


Etiology


Pathophysiology

Hypothesized pathophysiological mechanism: exposure to allergen/antigen (e.g., infection, drugs) → stimulation of IgA production → deposition of IgA immune complexes in vascular walls (e.g., in the skin, GI tract, joints, kidneys) → activation of complement → vascular inflammation and damage Pasted image 20231029162851.png


Clinical features

Key features

Triad of palpable purpura, arthralgias, and abdominal pain in children.

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An upper respiratory tract infection often precedes symptom onset by 1–3 weeks.

Tip

IgAV is an important differential diagnosis to consider in children with a limp.


Diagnostics

Biopsy


Differential Diagnosis

See Purpura differential diagnosis
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Treatment