Cryoglobulinemia

  • Presence of serum cryoglobulins (single or mixed immunoglobulins that can undergo reversible precipitation at low temperatures)

  •    
     
    Cryofibrinogenemia : cryoprecipitate in plasma made up primarily of fibrinogen; can be primary or secondary to malignancy, autoimmune connective tissue disease or infection; presents with leg ulcers, livedo reticularis or purpura
     
       

  • Types II/III have rheumatoid factor (RF) activity and bind to polyclonal immunoglobulins; immune complexes form from circulating cryoglobulins and are subsequently deposited within blood vessel walls causing vasculitis
  • Histology: leukocytoclastic vasculitis
  • Treatment: directed at any underlying disease (i.e. HCV: IFNα + ribavirin)
   
 
 Type Immunoglobulins Underlying Associations Clinical Findings
 
I
Monoclonal IgM or IgG
(no rheumatoid factor activity)
Lymphoproliferative disorders (LPD), plasma cell dyscrasias
Raynaud’s phenomenon, purpura, acrocyanosis, arterial thrombosis
 
II (Mixed)
Monoclonal IgM (or IgG) with polyclonal IgG
HCV, autoimmune connective tissue diseases, LPD
Vasculitis with palpable purpura, arthralgias, glomerulonephritis, peripheral neuropathy
 
III (Mixed)
Polyclonal IgM complexed with polyclonal IgG
 
     
 
IFN treatment worsens peripheral neuropathy