BEHÇET’S SYNDROME SOCIETY
Similar Disorders
There are several disorders which have patterns of symptoms that overlap
with those of Behçet's disease. In the absence of a test to confirm
Behçet's this can make diagnosis quite difficult. This is especially
true when symptoms are making people unwell whilst these disorders are in
the early stages and have not yet developed a sufficient characteristic
set of symptoms. However, most of them have markers, and appropriate tests
and investigations will identify them, or the natural course of the
illnesses over time will enable a diagnosis to be made. They can then be
distinguished from Behçet's.
Pathergy
The exaggerated reaction of tissues to damage, known as pathergy, is the
nearest thing to a test for Behçet's disease at present. As pathergy
is not always present in some people with Behçet's and often
only intermittently present in patients who do have it, it is usually
used only to confirm a diagnosis when the other symptoms make it likely.
Tissue-type HLA B51
There has been some interest in the tissue-type marker B51 as there is a
statistical link between people with Behcet's disease being positive for
that type and having inflammation in the eyes. However, this only applies
to people from Japan, China and the Middle East and is not apparent in
people of Western ethnic origins. This limits its usefulness as a diagnostic
marker.
Research interest is now directed away from the B51 locus to adjacent areas
on the same chromosome with the possibility that there may be a malfunction
in a gene or genes which form part of the immune system there.
Some similar disorders (differential diagnoses)
- Ulcerative colitis
- Crohn's disease
- Coeliac disease
- HLA-B27 seronegative arthritis eg ankylosing spondylitis
- Reiter's syndrome
- Stevens-Johnson syndrome
- Sarcoidosis
- Multiple sclerosis
- Immune deficiency diseases
- Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE, Lupus)
- Rheumatoid arthritis
- Sjögren's syndrome
- Lyme disease (Borrelia burgdorferi)
- Food intolerance and allergy