What is vasculitis?

What is vasculitis?

What Is – Vasculitis. Vasculitis (vas-kyu-LI-tis) is a condition that involves inflammation in the blood vessels. The condition occurs if your immune system attacks your blood vessels by mistake. This may happen as the result of an infection, a medicine, or another disease or condition.

What are the long term effects of vasculitis?

Organ damage. Some types of vasculitis can be severe, causing damage to major organs. Blood clots and aneurysms. A blood clot may form in a blood vessel, obstructing blood flow. Rarely, vasculitis will cause a blood vessel to weaken and bulge, forming an aneurysm (AN-yoo-riz-um). Vision loss or blindness.

What is cryoglobulin-associated vasculitis?

In cryoglobulin-associated vasculitis, small-vessel vasculitis is associated with cryoglobulins – these are proteins in the blood that stick together in the cold. Having cryoglobulins can reduce the flow of blood or even block the blood vessels, causing damage to organs or body tissues.

What are the treatment options for vasculitis?

The treatments used for vasculitis will depend upon which blood vessels and organs are affected, as well as how much body tissue is affected. If the vasculitis only affects the skin, it may be enough to treat any underlying infection or to remove the drug that triggered the vasculitis.

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