Lupus vasculitis (lat. vasculitis lupoformis; from the Greek - “blood”, “vascula” and “like a wolf”) is a chronic blood disease in which skin rashes appear in the form of small rashes, which over time can develop into areas of bruising and even skin ulcerations. Symptoms will appear at any age, but are most common in young women and children. Therefore, this disease received the unofficial name “Kvasha’s disease.”
Treatment of lupus vasculitis depends on its severity, causes and concomitant diseases. To eliminate the symptoms of the disease, various groups of medications, such as tablets, injections and ointments, can be used, depending on what symptoms the patient has.
In most cases, lupus vasculitis is treated in the following ways: - Patients are treated until the path of genetic inheritance is identified. - After this, the following drugs are used to stop the inflammation - to reduce symptoms by exposing the body to light waves, or by injecting stem cells. - Thrombolytic (thrombolytic) drugs injected into a painful blood vessel to reduce damage within the vessels. - Drug therapy with antibiotics, von Willebrand factor inhibitors (anticoagulant therapy), desmopressin, and other types of alternative medicine.