Antisynthetase syndrome (ASS) is an idiopathic inflammatory myopathy and chronic, systemic autoimmune disease with the presence of antisynthetase antibodies such as anti-Jo-1
the anti-Jo-1 ASS is characterized by systemic involvement of muscle (myositis), lungs (interstitial lung disease) and articulation (chronic polyarthritis) besides fever, Raynaud's phenomenon and "mechanical hands"
ASS is a rare syndrome, its prevalence in the general population is unknown
ASS affects mainly adult individuals at a ratio of 2.3 females : 1 male
ASS can present antibodies against different aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases
these cytoplasmatic proteins belong to the enzyme family whose function is to catalyze the bonding of specific aminoacids to respective tRNA
the presence of these antibodies is found in approximately 20-40% of polymyositis and 5% of adult dermatomyositis
the most frequent is anti-Jo-1 against histidyl-tRNA synthetase
Clinical features
clinical manifestation of ASS is relatively homogeneous with one or more of the following features: myositis, interstitial pulmonary disease and articular involvement. The presence of fever, Reynaud's phenomenon and "mechanical hands" may also be observed
the muscle feature is found in more than 90% of cases with manifestation of myalgia, muscle weakness, atrophy and fibrosis
initially usually proximal muscle involvement
changes are evident on muscle biopsy, electromyography and muscle enzyme increases
pulmonary involvement is found in more than 60% of cases and is the main cause of morbidity where this involvement can occur in the absence of muscle features
in some cases interstitial pulmonary disease is predominant in ASS
can show rapid onset and lead to acute respiratory insufficiency
features include dyspnoea, cough, thoracic pain, intolerance to physical exercises and respiratory insufficiency
pulmonary radiography images can reveal an interstitial pattern
CT scan can reveal a variety of findings -ground-glass pulmonary lesion, linear opacities, consolidations parenchymal, micronodules
pulmonary function test shows a restrictive pattern
the presence of pulmonary hypertension is reported in the literature and is associated to interstitial pulmonary disease
the presence of anti-Ro antibody has been associated to pulmonary fibrosis in ASS
articular involvement affects 50% of cases, with arthralgia and/or arthritis, with or without bone erosions
Raynaud's phenomenon, "mechanical hands", photosensitivity, malar rash may also be present. Cutaneous vasculitis has been also described
cardiac involvement has also been observed, but its prevalence appears not to differ from that of polymyositis/dermatomyositis
mesangial proliferative glomerulonephritis has been described in ASS, where its manifestation is rare and has a good prognosis
Management
corticosteroid therapy is the first-line treatment for myositis and also for interstitial pneumopathy in ASS
with regard to immunosuppressive use, no consensus has been reached
most routinely used immunosuppressives are cyclophosphamide, azathioprine, mycophenolate mofetil, cyclosporine and tacrolimus
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