Allergic Granulomatosis of the Conjunctiva in Asthmatic Patients: A Limited Form of the
Churg-Strauss Syndrome
Altin Pani MD, Martin Mayers MD, Pearl S Rosenbaum MDDepartment of OphthalmologyBronx-Lebanon Hospital Center
Albert Einstein College of MedicineBronx, NY
The authors have no financial interest in the subject matter of this poster.
PURPOSE Although rare, ophthalmologic manifestations of the Churg-Strauss
syndrome have been described and include conjunctival inflammation, (3, 5, 7, 9), uveoscleritis and papilledema (1), amaurosis fugax, superior oblique palsy, ischemic optic neuropathy (10), branch retinal artery occlusion (2), and orbital inflammatory pseudotumor (8 ).
Herein we describe the clinical and pathological entity of allergic granulomatosis (hypersensitivity granuloma, eosinophilic granuloma with flame figures) of the conjunctiva which, in a patient with bronchial asthma, may represent a limited form of the potentially life-threatening Churg-Strauss syndrome (allergic granulomatosis and angiitis).
METHODSClinicopathological case reports of a 56-year-old Hispanic man (Case #1) and a 40-year-old African-American woman (Case#2) who underwent biopsies of superior limbal conjunctival nodules.
External photograph of 1-2 mm, tan conjunctival nodules on the superior bulbar conjunctiva of both patients. The lesions are mobile over the sclera.
Case # 1Case # 2
Case # 2
METHODSBoth patients had a past medical history of bronchial asthma. The patient in Case #1 had exacerbation of his asthma at presentation and required hospitalization one week later.
Both patients underwent excision of their bulbar conjunctival nodules. Histopathology was performed in both cases and electron microscopy was additionally performed in Case #1.
RESULTSHistopathology
Histopathology of the conjunctival nodules in both cases revealed an intact epithelium and basement membrane. Within the substantia propria there was eosinophilic infiltration with scattered lymphocytes and plasma cells. Several “flame figures” (arrows) were also present.
“FLAME FIGURE” HISTOPATHOLOGY
Higher power magnifications of the flame figures demonstrate a central mass of amorphous basophilic and eosinophilic material surrounded by palisading histiocytes and scatterd multinucleated giant cells (arrows).
Leder esterase staining was positive, showing the reddish granularity of the eosinophilic enzymes
within the central zone of the flame figures.
RESULTSTransmission Electron Microscopy
Case # 1: Ultrastructurally, the flame figures demonstrated degranulated eosinophils (E) adjacent to intact bundles of collagen (C) (left). Free
eosinophilic granules (EG) coat the collagen (right).
CC
CC
C
EEG
E
Original magnification 9,000x Original magnification 30,000x
CONCLUSIONS Allergic granulomatosis and angiitis (Churg-Strauss syndrome, 1951) is
severe, usually fatal, multisystem vasculitis characterized clinically by bronchial asthma, fever and eosinophilia.
Histopathologically, a necrotizing vasculitis of small arteries and veins, infiltration of vessels and perivascular tissues by eosinophils, and extravascular granulomas have been noted .
Several asthmatic patients with allergic granulomatosis of the prostate who later developed systemic angiitis have been described (4, 6). Histopathology of prostatic biopsies in these cases also disclosed eosinophilic granulomas with flame figures . These cases may initially have represented a pre-vasculitic phase of Churg-Strauss syndrome.
CONCLUSIONS
Thus, while the conjunctival flame figure may simply represent a transient result of unusual eosinophil activity in response to various inciting stimuli, its presence in a patient with bronchial asthma may warrant close clinical observation for the development of multisystem vasculitis and the full blown clinical features of the Churg-Strauss syndrome.
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