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Query: UMLS:C0039483 (
giant cell arteritis
)
3,204
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 77-year-old woman was admitted because of progressive vertigo, nausea and a dysarthric speech disorder. The patient's history of diabetes mellitus, hypertension and
hypercholesterolaemia
, and the finding of murmurs over peripheral arteries at physical examination led to a presumptive diagnosis of cerebellar ischaemia in the context of generalized atherosclerosis. However, the diagnosis was revised when bilateral cerebellar infarction was demonstrated radiologically, and a biopsy of a temporal artery revealed
giant cell arteritis
. Despite treatment with prednisone (60 mg daily) the patient's neurological condition deteriorated, and she succumbed several months later to pneumonia. The case illustrates the pitfalls in the diagnostic approach of elderly patients with multiple pathology and it also emphasizes that in an elderly person with high erythrocyte sedimentation rate (> 100 mm in the first hour)
temporal arteritis
should be ruled out as soon as possible to prevent further neurological damage.
...
PMID:[Clinical thinking and decision making in practice. An elderly patient with vertigo and high sedimentation rate]. 1066 48
Because the prognosis of
giant cell arteritis
(
GCA
) is related to the development of ischemic complications, we sought to assess the possible influence of traditional risk factors of atherosclerosis in the development of severe ischemic complications of
GCA
. We conducted a retrospective study of patients with biopsy-proven
GCA
diagnosed from 1981 to 2001 at the single hospital for a well-defined population of almost 250,000 people. Patients were considered to have severe ischemic manifestations if they suffered visual manifestations, cerebrovascular accidents, jaw claudication, or signs of occlusive changes in large arteries of the extremities. Patients were assessed for the presence of
hypercholesterolemia
, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, and heavy smoking at the time of
GCA
diagnosis. The presence of traditional risk factors of atherosclerosis at the time of
GCA
diagnosis in this series of 210 patients increased significantly the risk of developing at least 1 of the severe ischemic complications (odds ratio [OR], 1.79; 95% confidence intervals [CI], 1.03-3.11; p = 0.04). Patients with traditional atherosclerosis risk factors had fever less commonly than the rest of
GCA
patients (5.2% vs. 16.0%; p = 0.01).
GCA
patients with hypertension exhibited a significantly increased risk of developing severe ischemic complications (OR, 1.80; 95% CI, 1.00-3.25; p = 0.05). The current study suggests that the presence of atherosclerosis risk factors at the time of diagnosis of
GCA
may influence the development of severe ischemic manifestations of the disease.
...
PMID:Influence of traditional risk factors of atherosclerosis in the development of severe ischemic complications in giant cell arteritis. 1552 46
Patients with different forms of systemic vasculitis experience long-term morbidity and mortality caused by cardiovascular disease due to premature atherosclerosis. Epidemiologic reports of patients with
GCA
suggest that long-term mortality in this disease is not increased compared with the general population of the same age. The risk of a stroke, however, in particular in the vertebrobasilar territory, is increased. In addition, the occurrence of aortic aneurysmal disease and aortic dissection is also clearly increased in
GCA
. Mortality due to ischaemic heart disease, however, is not increased. In Takayasu arteritis accelerated atherosclerosis has been clearly documented both clinically and in autopsy reports. Atherosclerotic plaques in the carotid artery may be present in the carotid arteries especially in patients with a documented history of arteritis involving the carotid artery. It is controversial whether Kawasaki disease is associated with accelerated atherosclerosis. Young adults with a history of Kawasaki disease may have abnormal brachial artery reactivity, increased carotid IMT values and increased arterial stiffness. At autopsy examinations of KD patients, however, no significant atherosclerotic lesions are detected and carotid IMT measurements were found to be clearly different from those in young adults with familiar
hypercholesterolaemia
, suggesting that the remodeling process in KD is different from atherosclerosis. In ANCA-associated vasculitis (AAV), an increased mortality as a consequence of cardiovascular disease is well-documented. In these patients the relative risk for coronary heart disease is two- to fourfold that in control subjects. In addition, a similar relative risk has been found for stroke. Diabetes, hypertension, dyslipidemia, abdominal obesity (metabolic syndrome), impaired renal function, persistent proteinuria and increased production of C-reactive protein are common risk factors for premature atherosclerosis in patients with systemic vasculitis. Furthermore, cholesterol and its modifications play a pivotal role in the pathogenesis of accelerated atherosclerosis in vasculitis. The (preventive) therapy for accelerated atherosclerosis in systemic vasculitis is based on an aggressive approach against inflammation and against risk factors of premature atherosclerosis such as smoking, inactivity, obesity and unhealthy diet. In addition, patients should be treated with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors and/or angiotensin receptor-1 blockers for hypertension and statins for dyslipidemia. Finally, low dose acetylsalicylic acid should be prescribed in patients with large vessel vasculitis, i.e., both in
GCA
and TA, who do not have contraindications for ASA.
...
PMID:Cardiovascular disease due to accelerated atherosclerosis in systemic vasculitides. 2350 55
Ocular ischemic syndrome, also known as hypoperfusion/ hypotensive retinopathy or as ischemic oculopathy is a rare ocular disease determined by chronic arterial hypoperfusion through central retinal artery, posterior and anterior ciliary arteries. It is bilateral in 20% of the cases. Most often it appears due to severe occlusion of the carotid arteries (ICA, MCA>ECA), described in 1963 by Kearns and Hollenhorst. Occasionally it can be determined by the obstruction of ophtalmic artery or some arterities (Takayasu,
giant cell arteritis
). The risk factors are: age between 50-80 years, males (M:F = 2:1), arterial hypertension, diabetes, coronary diseases (5% of the cases develop ocular ischemic syndrome), vascular stroke, hemodialysis. The case we present is of an 63 years old man known with primary arterial hypertension,
hypercholesterolemia
, diabetes type 2 non insulin dependent and diagnosticated with ischemic cerebral stroke and bilateral obstruction of internal carotid arteries in march 2010, who is presenting for visual impairment in both eyes. The imaging investigations show important carotid occlusion and at the ophthalmologic evaluation there are ocular hypertension and rubeosis iridis at the right eye, optic atrophy at both eyes (complete in the right eye and partial in the left eye), with superior altitudinal visual field defect in left eye. The following diagnosis was established: Chronic ocular ischemic syndrome in both eyes with Neovascular glaucoma at the right eye, Anterior ischemic optic neuropathy at the left eye and laser panphotocoagulation at the right eye was started.
...
PMID:[Ocular ischemic syndrome--a case report]. 2438 88
Glucocorticoids are the mainstay of treatment for
GCA
. Patients often require long-term treatment that may be associated with numerous adverse effects, depending on the dose and the duration of treatment. Trends in recent decades for glucocorticoid use in
GCA
suggest increasing cumulative doses and longer exposures. Common adverse events (AEs) reported in glucocorticoid-treated
GCA
patients include osteoporosis,
hypercholesterolaemia
, hypertension, posterior subcapsular cataract, infections, diabetes mellitus, Cushingoid appearance, adrenal insufficiency and aseptic necrosis of bone. AEs considered most worrisome by patients and rheumatologists include weight gain, psychological effects, osteoporosis, cardiometabolic complications and infections. The challenge is to maximize the benefit-risk ratio by giving the maximum glucocorticoid treatment necessary to control
GCA
initially and then to prevent relapse but to give the minimum treatment possible to avoid glucocorticoid-related AEs. We discuss the safety issues associated with long-term glucocorticoid use in patients with
GCA
and strategies for preventing glucocorticoid-related morbidity.
...
PMID:Prevention of glucocorticoid morbidity in giant cell arteritis. 2998 79