Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0039483 (giant cell arteritis)
3,204 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Headache may be the presenting symptom of many diseases in the elderly. Some headaches are caused by significant intracranial disease, and the patient's age and general cardiologic and respiratory status may not allow investigation or neurosurgical management. Conditions that demand urgent neurosurgical attention are subarachnoid hemorrhage, pituitary apoplexy, subdural hematoma, and meningioma. Cranial arteritis, too, should be remembered as a possible medical cause of headache in the elderly.
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PMID:Differentiating causes of headache. 88 44

The elderly as a whole suffer fewer headaches than the young. For the majority headache will represent a minor annoyance to be endured or treated with any available drug in the medicine chest. For some, migraine headaches or tension-type headaches become entwined with every daily activity. With the advent of modern pharmacology, headache can often be treated successfully. Trigeminal neuralgia is a source of particularly high morbidity among the elderly, but may be treated very satisfactorily with carbamazepine or baclofen. Paroxysmal hemicrania is exquisitely sensitive to indomethacin, while cluster headache patients receive relief from oxygen inhalation, corticosteroids or lithium. Headache may be the signature of the disease which leads to serious morbidity and mortality. The 'sentinel' headache of subarachnoid haemorrhage is evaluated by a physician in 15% of patients who will eventually rupture an intracranial aneurysm. Morning headache with nausea and vomiting may represent increased intracranial pressure caused by a tumour, haematoma or abscess. The elderly patient with a new headache needs emergency evaluation for temporal arteritis and rapid corticosteroid treatment if the diagnosis is confirmed, to prevent blindness. The broad spectrum of headache, at times a benign aggravation, while at others the harbinger of death, makes the careful evaluation of each headache imperative. This article attempts to make the difficult evaluation of head pain a little easier.
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PMID:Treatment of the elderly patient with headache or trigeminal neuralgia. 179 4

The atypical clinical course of giant-cell arteritis in the elderly (who may develop a clinical picture of severe consumptive disease) is illustrated by two observations with histologically confirmed temporal arteritis. In addition to fever and loss of weight, the inflammatory vascular process in a 78-year old female was reflected in arrhythmias (atrial fibrillation and atrial flutter), probably due to involvement of the coronary arteries, and occlusion of the left axillary artery. Similar general symptoms and various neurological deficits comprising amaurosis, mononeuritis multiplex, polyneuropathy, myopathy and finally subarachnoid hemorrhage characterized the disease in a 72-year-old man. The picture was further complicated by intestinal perforation. In both patients steroids brought considerable improvement and the disease process came to a standstill.
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PMID:[Atypical giant cell arteritis]. 199 Apr 21

The diagnosis of serious causes of headache depends on a careful history, a high index of suspicion of the unusual presentations and the judicious use of CT scanning. It is important not to overlook subarachnoid haemorrhage, intracerebral haemorrhage, meningitis, cerebral tumours, cerebral malformations and giant cell arteritis. Iatrogenic causes such as drugs and spinal procedures should also be considered.
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PMID:Pitfalls in headache management. 227 63

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.
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PMID:Severe headaches. When to worry, what to do. 231 44

Uncommon headache syndromes can be classified into two broad categories: (1) urgent conditions, including subarachnoid hemorrhage, giant cell arteritis and bacterial meningitis, and (2) special syndromes, such as cluster headache, migraine with aura and headache caused by benign intracranial hypertension. In this article, uncommon headaches are differentiated from the common migraine and the tension headache, which fall into a third category. If a neurologic abnormality is detected during the physical examination, aggressive medical diagnostic intervention is required. Because of its cost, neuroimaging should be reserved for specific situations that herald life-threatening or acutely reversible conditions; it should not be used in the work-up of nonspecific headache. The diagnosis of common headaches can be simplified by considering tension and common migraine syndromes to exist at different points on a headache spectrum.
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PMID:Recognizing uncommon headache syndromes. 894 Sep 58

Giant cell arteritis (GCA) is a disease chiefly found in elderly patients. Intracranial vessels are rarely involved in GCA. Here we report the case of a 19-year-old woman with GCA in the basilar and vertebral arteries. Two weeks after the first symptoms, she developed an aneurysmatical dilatation of the right vertebral artery which ruptured leading to subarachnoid hemorrhage. Although the ruptured right vertebral artery was clipped neurosurgically, she died two days later. Autopsy revealed GCA with focal medial necrosis and intimal thickening of the vertebral arteries and the basilar artery. No other arteries were affected. In the involved vessels, the media exhibited C1q immunoreactivity. At the intimal site of the internal elastic lamina there were increased levels of elastase. Other arterial diseases showing the pattern of GCA were excluded. This case demonstrates that GCA is not necessarily restricted to elderly people. Moreover, this case shows that a GCA-induced aneurysm is a very rare reason for subarachnoid hemorrhage even in young adults.
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PMID:Giant cell arteritis in a 19-year-old woman associated with vertebral artery aneurysm and subarachnoid hemorrhage. 1132 2

Headaches that have an explosive onset with exercise, including sexual activity, generally are benign in origin. A subarachnoid hemorrhage, a mass lesion in the brain, or an anomaly of the posterior fossa must be considered, however. The mechanisms that produce sexually induced or cough headaches of abrupt onset are unknown. It is known, however, that a rapid increase in intrathoracic pressure suddenly reduces right atrial pressure and presumably decreases venous sinus drainage from the brain. This situation results in a transient increase in intracranial pressure. Jaw pain that occurs with chewing often is considered to be TMJ dysfunction when arthritic in quality and if subluxations of the jaw can be shown on the physical examination. Giant cell arteritis and common or external carotid artery occlusive disease should be considered when the pain is ischemic in quality. An anginal equivalent is another possibility. Headaches that worsen with vigorous exercise are commonly migrainous. When their onset is apoplectic with exertion (particularly exertion against a closed glottis), the most likely diagnoses are increased intracranial pressure, a posterior fossa abnormality, or benign exertional headaches. Most cardiac induced headaches, but not all, are of a more gradual onset. If there are significant risk factors for coronary artery disease, an exercise stress test is appropriate. A therapeutic trial of nitroglycerin may help to establish a diagnosis if it improves the headache. Using antimigraine drugs as a diagnostic test is inappropriate because triptans and ergots are contraindicated in the presence of coronary artery disease, and a positive response is not diagnostic of migraine.
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PMID:A spectrum of exertional headaches. 1148 Feb 60

Stroke has enormous clinical, social, and economic implications, and demands a significant effort from both basic and clinical science in the search for successful therapies. Atherosclerosis, the pathologic process underlying most coronary artery disease and the majority of ischemic stroke in humans, is an inflammatory process. Complex interactions occur between the classic risk factors for atherosclerosis and its clinical consequences. These interactions appear to involve inflammatory mechanisms both in the periphery and in the CNS. Central nervous system inflammation is important in the pathophysiologic processes occurring after the onset of cerebral ischemia in ischemic stroke, subarachnoid hemorrhage, and head injury. In addition, inflammation in the CNS or in the periphery may be a risk factor for the initial development of cerebral ischemia. Peripheral infection and inflammatory processes are likely to be important in this respect. Thus, it appears that inflammation may be important both before, in predisposing to a stroke, and afterwards, where it is important in the mechanisms of cerebral injury and repair. Inflammation is mediated by both molecular components, including cytokines, and cellular components, such as leukocytes and microglia, many of which possess pro- and/or antiinflammatory properties, with harmful or beneficial effects. Classic acute-phase reactants and body temperature are also modified in stroke, and may be useful in the prediction of events, outcome, and as therapeutic targets. New imaging techniques are important clinically because they facilitate dynamic evaluation of tissue damage in relation to outcome. Inflammatory conditions such as giant cell arteritis and systemic lupus erythematosus predispose to stroke, as do a range of acute and chronic infections, principally respiratory. Diverse mechanisms have been proposed to account for inflammation and infection-associated stroke, ranging from classic risk factors to disturbances of the immune and coagulation systems. Considerable opportunities therefore exist for the development of novel therapies. It seems likely that drugs currently used in the treatment of stroke, such as aspirin, statins, and modulators of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, act at least partly via antiinflammatory mechanisms. Newer approaches have included antimicrobial and antileukocyte strategies. One of the most promising avenues may be the use of cytokine antagonism, for example, interleukin-1 receptor antagonist.
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PMID:Inflammation and infection in clinical stroke. 1246 86

New daily persistent headache (NDPH), which is the acute onset of headache within 3 days and is persistent for 15 days or more each month for at least 3 months, is a predominantly female heterogeneous subtype of chronic daily headache, typically with migraine features of unknown etiology. NDPH may be a presentation of other primary headaches such as new onset migraine, tension, or benign thunderclap headache. The headaches can be difficult to treat. The diagnosis is one of excluding the many secondary types or NDPH mimics, which is especially critical early in the course of the disease when a secondary etiology is more likely. NDPH mimics include postmeningitis headache, NDPH with medication rebound, neoplasms, temporal arteritis, chronic meningitis, chronic subdural hematoma, post-traumatic headaches, sphenoid sinusitis, hypertension, subarachnoid hemorrhage, low cerebrospinal fluid pressure syndrome, cervical artery dissections, pseudotumor cerebri without papilledema, and cerebral venous thrombosis.
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PMID:New daily persistent headache. 1282 80


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