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

Present views on the cause and treatment of temporal arteritis, trigeminal neuralgia, pain arising from the neck, benign intracranial hypertension, and other headaches of intracranial origin are summarized. The clinical components of migraine are correlated with recent studies of cerebral blood flow, monoamine changes, and the platelet release reaction. Psychological, physiological, and pharmacological management is based on the holistic concept of migraine as an uninhibited protective reaction. Cluster headache is subdivided into three varieties which respond preferentially to different medication. Tension headache may depend more on vascular mechanisms than excessive muscle contraction, but treatment is still directed at behavioral management and relaxation training with the aid of antidepressant therapy.
...
PMID:Headache. 702 51

Visual and oculomotor changes may be the only abnormalities in patients complaining of headache. Ocular signs are common during episodes of migraine and cluster headache. Temporal arteritis may be an extracranial cause of ocular signs. Intracranial disorders include painful ophthalmoplegia, pseudotumor cerebri and various causes of increased intracranial pressure. Neurophthalmologic evaluation in headache patients must include assessment of visual acuity and visual fields, examination of pupils (including pharmacologic testing), ophthalmoscopic examination and auscultation for bruits.
...
PMID:Neurophthalmologic signs in headache syndromes. 706 59

We have reviewed the clinical records and histology of 135 patients who underwent temporal artery biopsy between 1973 and 1978. Biopsies were classified histologically as giant-cell arteritis (17%), atypical arteritis (6%), healed arteritis (2%), arteriosclerosis (67%), atherosclerosis (5%), or normal (3%). Most of the histological diagnoses made at the time of biopsy were confirmed but eight cases which had originally been reported as atypical or healed arteritis were classified as arteriosclerosis when reviewed. All 33 patients with histological evidence of arteritis were accepted as clinical cases of temporal arteritis (31) or polymyalgia rheumatica (2) and treated with steroids. A further 24 patients had negative biopsies (arteriosclerosis or atherosclerosis) but were considered on clinical grounds to have cranial arteritis. They too were treated and made a full recovery. In 43 cases, all of whom had negative biopsies, a final diagnosis was reached which was thought to account for the clinical symptoms (e.g., cerebrovascular accident, rheumatoid disease, migraine, etc.). As less than 60% of patients with clinical temporal arteritis had positive biopsies, we suggest that this procedure could be omitted and replaced by a trial of steroid therapy. Biopsy should be reserved for patients with a strong medical contraindication to steroid therapy, or who fail to respond to treatment promptly.
...
PMID:Temporal artery biopsy in giant-cell arteritis. A reappraisal. 727 Jul 80

The symptom of vascular neck pain, known as carotidynia, refers to throbbing pain of the neck and face with tenderness of the carotid artery. Recent publications suggest that carotidynia is a benign complaint, frequently associated with migraine, and often responding to migraine therapy. Past experience, and our own, indicates that carotidynia may be a symptom of other more serious disorders whose identification is essential to prevent subsequent catastrophic complications. 7 patients discussed in this publication presented with carotidynia. 4 have been reported previously. The associated disorders were dissecting aneurysm of the internal carotid artery (2 patients), long intraluminal clots with incomplete vessel obstruction of the internal carotid artery (2 patients), spontaneous aneurysm of the common carotid bifurcation (2 patients) and giant cell arteritis. We conclude that carotidynia is a symptom to be regarded with suspicion. The majority of patients encountered will have 'benign' carotidynia and angiography or exploratory surgery should not be routine. A rational approach to evaluation, investigation and treatment is presented.
...
PMID:Carotidynia: aetiology, diagnosis and treatment. 734 92

Patients with facial pain, without overt dental disease, are often seen in both medical and dental practice. The differential diagnosis includes (a) cluster headache, in which patients have severe unilateral pains lasting 30 to 120 minutes that respond to verapamil, corticosteroids or lithium; (b) migraine, in which attacks are longer and are often accompanied by nausea and visual disturbance, and can be managed using anti-inflammatory analgesics, with or without metoclopramide, or sumatriptan, although frequent attacks are best suppressed by continuous propranolol or pizotifen; (c) trigeminal neuralgia, knifelike unilateral pains usually responsive to carbamazepine; and (d) temporal arteritis, a steadier pain very responsive to corticosteroids. There is no evidence that continuous 'idiopathic facial pain' is a result of malocclusion (i.e. the way in which the teeth fit together), and its aetiology remains obscure, although there is some biochemical evidence linking it to depression. Many patients respond to simple analgesia and firm reassurance from the physician, although antidepressant therapy (e.g. nortriptyline or dothiepin) is often of great value.
...
PMID:Orofacial neuralgia. Diagnosis and treatment guidelines. 769 15

Headaches are a common problem that can be disabling. The clinical features and treatment of migraine, cluster, and tension headaches are presented in this article. Emphasis is placed on the newer drugs available for acute and prophylactic treatment of these headaches. Features of headaches associated with intracranial aneurysms, temporal arteritis, cerebrovascular accidents, brain tumors, and temporomandibular disorders are also discussed.
...
PMID:Headaches. 787 90

An unusual case is described of infarction of the tongue as a presentation of cranial arteritis. The lingual necrosis may have been precipitated in part by the use of ergotamine to relieve the headache of the temporal arteritis, mistaken initially for migraine. The patient recovered with high-dose steroid therapy.
...
PMID:Lingual infarction in cranial arteritis. 791 30

The diagnoses of the 193 patients aged 65 and over who attended the service of neurology in the past 15 years with de novo headache as their initial and main symptom were specifically analysed. Headaches beginning in elderly people represented only 5.4% of headaches in all ages, whereas 12.1% of the population in this health area was 65 or over. Head pain appeared more often in women (63%), although post-traumatic, cluster, and benign cough headaches were almost restricted to men. Tension type headache (83 patients, 43% of the aged patients) and idiopathic trigeminal neuralgia (36, 19%) were the most frequent diagnoses. Fifteen per cent of the elderly patients v 1.6% of patients under 65 presented headache secondary to serious conditions, such as stroke, temporal arteritis, or intracranial neoplasm. Only one patient over 65 met migraine criteria. It is concluded that whereas the incidence of patients with headache attending a general hospital decreases with age, the risk of headaches due to serious conditions increases 10-fold after 65.
...
PMID:Experience in the diagnosis of headaches that start in elderly people. 793 91

Described by Fay in 1927, carotidynia has not received much attention in the otolaryngology-head and neck surgery literature. This unusual entity is characterized by ipsilateral neck pain in the region of the carotid artery near its bifurcation. The differential diagnosis is extensive and includes thyroiditis, migraine headache, aneurysm of the carotid system, temporomandibular joint syndrome, giant cell arteritis, and head and neck neoplasms. A correct diagnosis is usually achieved by careful review of the history and physical examination. Laboratory studies are obtained primarily to exclude other causes. Successful treatment is most often effected with the use of nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs, although other treatment modalities may be needed. A series of 25 patients treated during the past 10 years is presented. The symptoms, physical findings, appropriate laboratory studies, and a treatment protocol for this uncommon entity are detailed.
...
PMID:Carotidynia: an unusual pain in the neck. 817 Jun 82

Temporal arteritis is an insidious disease which, if not recognized and treated with high-dosage oral prednisone or intravenous prednisolone, can result in unilateral or even total blindness due to anterior ischemic optic neuropathy (AION) or closure of the central artery of the retina. Unfortunately, the symptoms and clinical signs of temporal arteritis mimic those of a number of other conditions including angle-closure glaucoma, hypertension, migraine, trigeminal neuralgia, temporomandibular joint syndrome, carotid artery occlusive disease, Foster-Kennedy syndrome, and nonarteritic AION. When a patient complains of a severe pain in the temporal region, along with scalp tenderness and a feeling of malaise or depression--with or without episodes of transient loss of vision--he or she should be referred for a diagnostic work-up which includes an erythrocyte sedimentation rate and a temporal artery biopsy. We present here a review of the recent literature concerning temporal arteritis, followed by a report of an unusual case in which high-dosage prednisone therapy was effective in relieving the patient's symptoms and lowering the sedimentation rate in spite of a negative temporal artery biopsy.
...
PMID:Diagnosis and management of temporal arteritis: a review and case report. 823 73


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 Next >>