Raynaud’s Syndrome

Raynaud’s Syndrome or Phenomenon

  • Thought to be caused by sympathetic nervous overactivity and vasospasm
  • Idiopathic (primary Raynaud’s)– symptoms brought on by emotional stress, temp, caffeine
    • Rarely develops finger ischemia
  • Secondary – associated with autoimmune diseases (scleroderma, RA, SLE)
    • Severe finger ischemia can occur

Medical Management of Raynaud’s Phenomenon

  • Dihydropyridines calcium channel blockers (CCB) are the first choice for drug therapy (Nifedipine 10 BID, amlodipine, felodipine)
  • ARB (losartan) can be taken alone or added to a CCB. ACE inhibitor use has not been proven.
  • IV prostanoid (iloprost) reserved for severe disease with critical ischemia
  • For secondary Raynaud’s with systemic sclerosis (SLE, scleroderma)
    • Treat underlying disease
    • Rheumatology consult
    • Botox injection at the base of finger has shown to be helpful

Diagnostic Tests to Rule Out Secondary Causes

  • Antinuclear antibiodies (ANA)
  • Lupus anticoagulant
  • Anticardioplipin antibody
  • Protein S and C levels
  • Antithrombin III
  • Hypercoagulability

 

Source: https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMra1507638