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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (
headache
)
56,091
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A case of generalized granuloma annulare associated with
temporal arteritis
is described. The patient, a 79-year-old man, noticed numerous asymptomatic lesions on his trunk and extremities for 3 months. Four months later, he suffered from
headache
and loss of vision. Both were successfully treated by oral administration of prednisolone.
...
PMID:Generalized granuloma annulare in a patient with temporal arteritis--are these conditions associated? 231 Dec 87
All patients who present with severe
headaches
merit careful medical and neurologic evaluation, and many require neuroimaging studies or lumbar puncture. To avoid missing the occasional seriously ill patient among the large number of patients with relatively benign
headaches
, physicians must maintain a high index of suspicion and a familiarity with the differential diagnosis. Patients with severe acute
headaches
must be evaluated for subarachnoid hemorrhage and bacterial meningitis.
Temporal arteritis
must be excluded in all older patients with recurrent
headaches
of recent onset. Trigeminal neuralgia and cluster
headache
usually do not signify serious underlying disease, but the severity of the pain mandates rapid diagnosis and institution of therapy. Migraines are extremely common and often mislabeled as tension or sinus
headaches
. All primary care physicians should be able to recognize the many faces of migraine and be familiar with symptomatic and prophylactic therapy. Difficult cases should be referred to a neurologist for ongoing care.
...
PMID:Severe headaches. When to worry, what to do. 231 44
This study seeks to define the types of
headache
and the sex and age distribution, of
headache
patients aged 65 and older. A computer search was performed of outpatients with a diagnosis of
headache
or
temporal arteritis
seen during 1988 at the Cleveland Clinic Foundation. Of over 120,000 outpatients treated at the clinic 9,950 had a diagnosis of
headache
; of these, 359 were 65 or older. We found that, compared with younger patients, older
headache
patients had more tension headache and less migraine headache. In our population,
temporal arteritis
occurred with the same frequency as migraine, and in patients with a similar demographic profile.
Headache
1990 Apr
PMID:Demographics of headache in elderly patients. 235 49
A case of
temporal arteritis
presenting with extrapyramidal symptoms (tremor, rigidity and extrapyramidal hypertonus) unresponsive to conventional treatment is here described. The onset of
headache
and laboratory abnormalities suggestive of
temporal arteritis
prompted a temporal artery biopsy which confirmed the diagnosis; the administration of corticosteroids led to the resolution of all symptoms.
...
PMID:Temporal arteritis presenting as an extrapyramidal disorder. 236 Apr 6
Though surgeons have little input in the selection of patients for temporal-artery biopsy, a knowledge of temporal-artery anatomy and the pathophysiology of
temporal arteritis
is important. All temporal-artery biopsies done at Carraway Methodist Medical Center between January 1980 and January 1985 were reviewed. Seventy-three biopsies were performed on 70 patients and eight (11.4%) were found to have
temporal arteritis
histologically. One patient was judged to have
temporal arteritis
clinically, despite a negative biopsy of short length. Six of eight patients with positive biopsies were female, with an average age of 71.7 years. The most common signs and symptoms of those patients with positive biopsies were temporal
headache
(8/8), elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate (7/8), temporal tenderness (5/8), jaw claudication (3/8), and visual changes (3/8). All biopsies were done under local anesthesia and there were no complications. With increasing awareness of the segmental nature of the disease, the length of biopsy specimens (formalin treated) increased from an average of 0.4 cm in 1980 to 2.4 cm in 1984. During this time, the positive rate increased from 0 per cent (0/9) to 17 per cent (4/24). A generous biopsy of approximately 5 cm in length of fresh vessel is recommended to confirm the suspected diagnosis of
temporal arteritis
.
...
PMID:Temporal artery biopsy. 240 66
We describe a case of patient 62 year old who suffers from
temporal arteritis
. It's started atypicalls and because the first symptoms of the disease are often stiffness of the masticatory system and impaired mobility of the lower jaw, the first person to examine the patient may well be a dentist. Other common symptoms are
headache
, tiredness, slight fever and other general symptoms.
Temporal arteritis
often raises diagnostic problems, especially with mandibular dysfunction. Correct and early diagnosis is therefore of great importance. The clinical features, electromyographic and histopathological findings and therapy are described and differential diagnostic problems are discussed.
...
PMID:[TMJ dysfunction as first symptom of arteritis temporalis (a case report)]. 251 54
A 71-year-old man had sudden vision loss associated with
headache
. A temporal artery biopsy revealed a typical picture of
giant cell arteritis
. Subsequent steroid therapy failed to restore sight. A later blood culture contained spirochetes compatible with Borrelia species, and a silver stain of the temporal artery biopsy specimen demonstrated a similar spirochete. Treatment with i.v. ceftriaxone sodium led to some limited return of sight. To our knowledge, this is the first case report of a spirochete compatible with Borrelia found in a temporal artery biopsy specimen.
...
PMID:Temporal arteritis associated with Borrelia infection. A case report. 252 42
Ocular complications occurring in
temporal arteritis
are of different severities. These manifestations of the disease occurred in a population of 57 patients with diagnosis of
temporal arteritis
, in 16 of them (28%). The diagnosis was suggested by finding an inflammatory syndrome (high erythrocyte sedimentation rate) and confirmed by temporal artery biopsy. In making this diagnosis, it was helpful to find a history of characteristic temporal
headaches
, neckache, jaw claudication, fever and malaise or weight loss in addition to polymyalgia and polyarthralgia. 6 patients presented with diplopia and different ocular muscle or nerve palsies. The 10 others came for sudden loss of vision due to ischemic anterior or posterior neuropathy and in one case, central artery obliteration. Prompt treatment with steroids gave good results on oculomotor troubles and in preventing the risk of involvement of the fellow eye. But loss of vision did not regress with this treatment. That means the importance in making this diagnosis and starting very promptly this treatment.
...
PMID:[Eye manifestations of Horton's disease]. 259 Sep 88
An 80-year-old Japanese woman with
temporal arteritis
was treated with systemic recombinant human interleukin-2 (IL-2) (1 x 10(6) unit/day for six weeks). The presenting symptoms of
headache
and skin necrosis and abnormal laboratory findings, such as an elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate and CRP, promptly improved without any serious side effects. Although the pathogenesis of
temporal arteritis
and the mechanism(s) of the beneficial effect of IL-2 on it still remain unknown, this preliminary study highly encourages further investigations.
...
PMID:A case of temporal arteritis successfully treated with recombinant interleukin-2. 262 56
We have evaluated 100 biopsies of temporal artery carried out in the Hospital La Paz from 1972 to 1986. On the basis of the histological result and the final diagnosis we divided the patients in five groups: I,
temporal arteritis
/polymyalgia rheumatica with positive biopsy, 11 cases; II,
temporal arteritis
without polymyalgia symptoms and with positive biopsy, 16 cases; III,
temporal arteritis
with negative biopsy, 7 cases; IV, polymyalgia with negative biopsy, 14 cases; and V, other diagnoses, 43 cases. The number of diagnoses of
temporal arteritis
/polymyalgia rheumatica has increased throughout the recent years, although the positive biopsies/overall biopsies ratio has remained constant. Certain symptoms such as claudication,
headache
, amaurosis and Raynaud's phenomenon have a high predictive value of a positive result, but their sensitivity is low. In the 25 patients with polymyalgia, biopsy was positive in 11, out of which 4 did not have features of
temporal arteritis
. Biopsy was positive in 4 out of the 9 patients in whom it was repeated in the contralateral side. The diagnostic yield was higher in those cases in whom it was indicated for classical
temporal arteritis
symptoms, but we emphasize that there was a 19% positive rate in patients who presented with fever of unknown origin, while it was only 5.5% in those in whom a constitutional syndrome was being evaluated. We conclude that the use of temporal biopsy should be more widespread, as its cost is low and it has no side effects; therefore, it can achieve a great benefit for the patient with a shorter and less expensive hospital stay.
...
PMID:[Usefulness of temporal artery biopsy: analysis of 100 cases]. 270
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