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with sarcoidosis p. 695
sarcoidosis and p. 695
sarcoidosis and p. 695
sarcoidosis p. 695
sarcoidosis p. 694
acute interstitial nephritis p. 620
cardiomyopathy with p. 315
erythema nodosum p. NaN
as granulomatous disease p. 207
hypervitaminosis D p. 469
macrophages and p. 413
presentation p. 726
restrictive lung disease p. 695
uveitis p. 551
sarcoidosis p. 695
sarcoidosis p. 695, 726
With sarcoidosis, sarcoid refers to the flesh and osis means disorder - and the reason we called it that, is that sarcoidosis is an immunologic disorder that results in lots of small nodules forming throughout the body. The disease is actually poorly understood though we know it’s most common among African American females.
Normally, the trusty cells of the immune system are ready to spot and destroy any foreign pathogens that could cause the body harm. To help with this mission, there’s a category of cells in the body called antigen-presenting cells, and these include macrophages, B-cells, and dendritic cells.
The most common member of the antigen presenting cell club is the dendritic cell which is named after its long beautiful branch-like arms called dendrites. When a dendritic cell comes into contact with a pathogen, it latches onto it and with its dendrites pulls and engulfs it. The pathogen is then broken down and the dendritic cell presents a piece of it, called an antigen, on something called a major histocompatibility complex class II molecule, or MHC-class II for short.
The dendritic cell then carries the antigen to the lymph node to find some naive helper T-cells which are T-cells that have never seen an antigen before. Eventually, it runs into a naive helper T-cell with a T-cell receptor that recognizes and binds to the antigen. Then, Cytokines get released by the dendritic cell and this helps to activate the helper T-cell which then begins to divide or proliferate.
The new T-cells then leave the comfort of their lymph node to fulfill their destiny in the great fight against infection. These brave T-cells start secreting proinflammatory cytokines, or signaling molecules, and they then recruit more immune cells like additional T-cells and macrophages.
In sarcoidosis though, this process unfolds over and over throughout the body without the presence of a specific pathogen that the body is trying to destroy. In other words, the immune system seems to be going a bit haywire in the absence of a pathogen. Now, the precise trigger isn’t actually known, but there are some known genetic and environmental risk factors.
Sarcoidosis is a chronic inflammatory disease whereby inflammatory cells called granulomas get abnormally collected in multiple organs in the body, most commonly the lungs, lymph nodes, eyes, skin, and liver. Its causes are not fully understood, it is believed to be caused by an immune reaction continuing after the initial infection or causative antigen is cleared from the body. Symptoms vary depending on which organs are affected, but they may include shortness of breath, cough, fatigue, weight loss, joint pain, vision changes, and skin rashes. Treatment for sarcoidosis depends on the severity and can involve supportive treatment and steroids.
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