Sarcoidosis


(Figures 3.16 and 3.17A, B)
  • Chronic multisystem inflammatory disease characterized by non-caseating granulomas of unknown etiology
  • Related to ↑ activity of cell mediated immune system
  • ↑ Frequency and severity in African American patients
  • Presents with cutaneous findings in approximately 30–40% patients, may be sole or initial manifestation
  • Presents typically with non-scaly, skin-colored to red-brown circinate or annular infiltrated papules/plaques on face, lips, neck, trunk, extremities; cutaneous sarcoidosis may develop within pre-existing scars
    • Hypopigmented lesions not uncommon in African-American patients
    • Sarcoidal plaques may appear psoriasiform
    • Less common presentations include ichthyosis over lower legs, hypopigmentation, scarring alopecia, and ulcerations
    • Variants (listed below)
  • Histology: superficial and deep sharply-defined naked epithelioid granulomas, giant cells, minimal lymphocytes near granulomas, eosinophilic stellate inclusion bodies (asteroid bodies) or round basophilic laminated inclusions (Schaumann bodies) seen in giant cells
  • Diagnosis (of exclusion): supported by ↑ ACE, ↑ calcium, ↑ ESR
  • Treatment: topical, IL or systemic corticosteroid, hydroxychloroquine, methotrexate or other immunosuppressant
   
 
Sarcoidosis VariantClinical Findings
 
Lupus pernio
Violaceous doughy infiltration on nose, cheeks or earlobes; often associated with chronic sarcoidosis of lungs, chronic
 
Darier-Roussy disease
Also known as sarcoidal panniculitis; painless subcutaneous mobile nodules without epidermal change
 
Löfgren’s syndrome
Acute sarcoidosis; erythema nodosum, hilar adenopathy, acute iritis, migrating polyarthritis, and fever
 
Mikulicz syndrome
Complex of symptoms caused by a variety of systemic disorders (i.e. Sjögren syndrome, lymphoma and sometimes sarcoidosis)
 
Parotid and lacrimal enlargement with swelling, ± sicca symptoms
 
Parinaud
oculoglandular syndrome
Conjunctivitis with ipsilateral lymphadenopathy

     
 
Also caused by infection (cat-scratch fever or tularemia)
 
     
     
 
Heerfordt’s syndrome
‘Uveoparotid fever’; fever, parotid gland enlargement, anterior uveitis, facial nerve palsy
 
Erythema nodosum
Seen in acute or subacute sarcoidosis; good prognostic sign, associated with transient sarcoidosis that resolves spontaneously
 
Oral sarcoidosis
May involve mucosa, tongue, major salivary glands, hard palate and gingival tissue
 
Ocular sarcoidosis
Seen in 15–25%: anterior uveitis (common), lacrimal gland involvement, chronic uveitis leading to adhesions, glaucoma, and blindness
 
Non-mucocutaneous
findings
Lung disease (alveolitis, fibrosis, hilar adenopathy), liver, spleen, bone, kidney, heart, GI involvement; hypercalcemia
 
   
Figure 3.16 Sarcoidosis (Courtesy of Dr. Iris K. Aronson)
Figure 3.16 Sarcoidosis
(Courtesy of Dr. Iris K.
Aronson
)
Figure 3.17 A: Sarcoidosis (Courtesy of Dr. Paul Getz) B: Sarcoidosis, hypopigmented
Figure 3.17
A: Sarcoidosis
(Courtesy of Dr. Paul Getz)
B: Sarcoidosis, hypopigmented