About Sicca/Sjogren’s Disease
Sjogrens is a chronic, inflammatory autoimmune disease involving exocrine gland inflammation.
- Extra-glandular symptoms affect up to 40% of patients
- Female:Male = 9:1
- Peak age 50-60yo
Important to rule out mimics: oral candidiasis, medications, smoking, contacts overuse
25-60% of neuropathy precedes Sjogren’s diagnosis
If sicca but SSA/SSB neg: consider cancer, need biopsy
Sjogren’s can be associated with cryoglobulinemic vasculitis (consider this diagnosis if new rash, labs will show LL C4, normal C3, high RF)
- Exocrine glands
- Sicca = dry eyes and/or dry mouth in >85% pts
- Ocular:
- Dry
- Itching
- Foreign body/gritty sensation
- Abnormal vision
- Dry mouth → frequent cavities
- Salivary gland enlargement
- Neuropathy
Lab workup
- SSa/SSb+ in 60-80%
- Other rheum labs nonspecific for Sjogren’s: ANA+, RF+
Objective testing
- Ocular surface staining
- Salivary gland scintigraphy
- Whole sialometry
- Salivary gland biopsy
- Schirmer test
- Age related sicca
- Medication-sicca
- Oral candidiasis
- Contact use
- Smoking
Endo: DM2, Thyroid
Viral: HCV, HIV
Lymphoma, other cancer
Avoid contributing medications and desiccants
Oral Symptoms
- Good hydration
- Salivary stimulants
- Artificial saliva
- Muscarinic agonist: pilocarpine, cevimeline
- 1.1% sodium fluoride
Ocular Symptoms
- Artificial tears/ointment
- Ophtho referral:
- Topical cyclosporine
- Punctal plugs
Extra-Glandular Manifestations
- DMARDs for arthritis: Hydroxychloroquine, methotrexate, etc.
- IVIG for neuropathy
Poor prognostic factors
- Low complements
- Salivary gland enlargement
- Lymphadenopathy
Complications
- Increased risk of non- Hodgkin lymphoma
- Vasculitis
- Cryoglobulinemia




