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Query: UMLS:C0039483 (giant cell arteritis)
3,204 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Changes in vision or loss of vision are common complaints for patients presenting to the emergency department. Such complaints may represent a simple problem related to recent trauma, early evidence of a systemic disease, or may be a vision-threatening lesion. A logical and organized approach to the history and the physical examination of the patient with eye complaints is key to the diagnosis and treatment of the more significant causes of these complaints. This article reviews an organized approach to the patient with complaint of visual loss and considers the wide differential diagnosis. It focuses specifically on the evaluation of the patient complaining of visual changes resulting from central retinal artery occlusion, central retinal vein occlusion, retinal detachment, acute angle-closure glaucoma, giant cell temporal arteritis, and retrobulbar hemorrhage.
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PMID:Acute visual change. 988 42

Acute monocular visual loss is an alarming symptom for the patient and the emergency physician. This article focuses on the presentation, diagnosis, and management of several causes of acute monocular visual loss with suggestions for when to emergently involve an ophthalmologist. Topics discussed include temporal arteritis, optic neuritis, retinal artery occlusion, retinal vein occlusion, retinal detachment, and retinal vasculitis.
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PMID:Acute monocular visual loss. 1824 58

Giant cell arteritis (Horton's disease) is an inflammatory panarteritis occurring most frequently in the elderly. Its common ocular manifestations are anterior ischemic optic neuropathy, choroidal ischemia and central retinal artery occlusion. We describe a case of Horton's disease revealed by a retinal detachment, optic neuropathy and severe choroidal ischemia. Prompt treatment with corticosteroids led to preservation of vision and resolution of the retinal detachment. This observation of a retinal detachment revealing a giant cell arteritis had not been yet reported in the literature.
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PMID:[Exsudative retinal detachment indicative of a giant cell arteritis. A case report]. 2156 51

Ophthalmologic complaints represent approximately 2% of emergency department (ED) visits. Acute vision loss is the most serious of such presentations and requires prompt assessment for a treatable cause. The differential diagnosis for acute vision loss includes retinal detachment, macular disorders, vaso-occlusive disorders, temporal arteritis, neuro-ophthalmologic disorders, and functional disorders. We report the case of a previously healthy 33-year-old man who presented to the ED with acute bilateral vision loss that was ultimately diagnosed as central serous retinopathy (CSR), an idiopathic, self-limited condition that typically affects males age 20 to 50 years. This condition is not mentioned in standard emergency medicine textbooks or the emergency medicine literature, and our hope is that our report will serve to illustrate a typical case of CSR and help prompt emergency physicians to consider this diagnosis in the appropriate circumstances.
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PMID:Central serous retinopathy: an unusual cause of acute visual loss. 2397 38

Primary care physicians are at the forefront of patient care and often are the first clinicians to triage and diagnose any eye-related complaints. They must be able to quickly identify vision-threatening pathologies, as delay in treatment of an ocular emergency can result in permanent vision loss. This concise review describes the definition, presentation, examination, and management of various ophthalmic emergencies including blunt ocular trauma, chemical ocular injury, orbital cellulitis, endophthalmitis, acute angle closure glaucoma, optic neuritis, giant cell arteritis, central retinal artery occlusion, retinal detachment, and homonymous hemianopia in a succinct manner.
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PMID:Ophthalmic Emergencies for the Clinician. 3237 Aug 36