Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0039483 (
giant cell arteritis
)
3,204
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Orofacial pain can have an inflammatory, neurologic or musculoskeletal cause. Inflammatory diseases include dental abscess, sinusitis,
temporal arteritis
, sialolithiasis and infections of the parotid gland. Common neurologic diseases that cause
facial pain
are trigeminal neuralgia, glossopharyngeal neuralgia, paratrigeminal neuralgia and cluster headaches. Musculoskeletal causes include temporomandibular joint syndrome and myofascial pain dysfunction syndrome. A clear understanding of pertinent anatomy and an organized approach to diagnosis will facilitate the evaluation of patients with orofacial pain.
...
PMID:Orofacial pain: diagnosis and treatment. 136 Jul 64
Temporomandibular joint (TMJ) dysfunction may manifest itself clinically by a variety of presentations ranging from headache, pre-auricular pain or tenderness, otalgia, to mandibular hypomobility. Some symptoms may mimic forms of
facial pain
such as:
temporal arteritis
, migraine, cluster headache, trigeminal or glossopharyngeal neuralgias, myofascial pain dysfunction, or muscle contraction (tension) headache. This article will focus on a relatively new diagnostic tool that may be used to examine the TMJ for intracapsular pathology which may be responsible for the presenting patients' symptoms.
...
PMID:The role of diagnostic arthroscopy in the management of temporomandibular joint dysfunction. 196 Jul 86
The clinical and autopsy findings in a patient with both systemic sclerosis (scleroderma) and
giant cell arteritis
are presented.
Giant cell arteritis
and systemic sclerosis are autoimmune diseases affecting the elderly that may be associated with similar clinical symptoms of
facial pain
and arthralgias. Their coexistence is virtually unknown in the medical literature but is of great clinical importance. Systemic sclerosis is not treated with the steroid dosage necessary to prevent the morbid results of
giant cell arteritis
. An elevated sedimentation rate and/or an abnormal temporal artery examination in an elderly patient with systemic sclerosis should alert the clinician to the possible coexistence of
giant cell arteritis
.
...
PMID:Giant cell arteritis associated with progressive systemic sclerosis. 252 58
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
A variety of conditions are frequently associated with the occurrence of head and neck pain. The purposes of this review are: to describe the characteristics of several musculoskeletal, neurological, and systemic conditions frequently cited as possible causes of head and neck pain and to suggest a new technique for treating head and neck pain. The characteristics of musculoskeletal conditions, such as muscle spasm, tendinitis, trigger points, and joint inflammation, and their relationship to head and neck pain are considered. The features and clinical implications of neurologic conditions, such as atypical
facial pain
, trigeminal and glossopharyngeal neuralgia, reflex sympathetic dystrophy, and neurogenic inflammation, are also described. The distinguishing characteristics of headaches, including cluster, tension, chronic daily, rebound, posttraumatic, and postlumbar puncture, are detailed. This review also addresses the contributions of systemic disorders, such as osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis and the variants, and rheumatoid-related conditions, like dermatomyositis,
temporal arteritis
, Lyme's disease, and fibromyalgia, to head and neck pain. The results of a recent pilot study of the effectiveness of intraoral circulating ice water for resolving symptoms related to head and neck pain secondary to neurogenic inflammation are presented in this work. Ice water circulating through hollow metal tubes was placed intraorally for 15 minutes in the posterior maxillary area on 12 individuals with cervical pain and muscle spasm. In nine of these individuals, reduced cervical pain perception, upper trapezius electromyography signal reduction, and increased cervical range of motion was produced. Six out of 12 individuals had accompanying headache, which was reduced or eliminated in four cases. These findings suggest a strong trigemino-cervical relationship to neck pain and headache.
...
PMID:Head and neck pain review: traditional and new perspectives. 889 41
Temporal arteritis
, also known more accurately as
giant cell arteritis
(
GCA
), is a multisystem vasculitis of elderly people that involves large and medium-sized blood vessels with a particular predilection to the craniofacial branches of the carotid arteries, especially the temporal artery. Symptoms include visual loss, headaches, fever, audiovestibular symptoms, and jaw claudication. Otolaryngologists are consulted to care for these patients to confirm the diagnosis, to rule out other causes of
face pain
and headaches, to care for patients with audiovestibular manifestations of
GCA
, and to perform temporal artery biopsies. Consequently, it is important for consultants to understand the signs and symptoms and natural history of
GCA
and the indications, technique, and complications of temporal artery biopsy.
GCA
can appear with protean head and neck manifestations. Otolaryngologists should be aware of these and understand the issues concerning maximizing the yield from temporal artery biopsies.
...
PMID:Temporal artery biopsy: concise guidelines for otolaryngologists. 1551 44
The first type of
facial pain
is of vascular origin. Cluster headache is described as well as its subgroups and carotidodynia. Two organic lesions of the arterial wall can also cause
facial pain
: dissection of the internal carotid artery and
giant cell arteritis
. Among the facial neuralgias, trigeminal neuralgia is the most frequent. Also, local lesions in the cranial nerves can cause
facial pain
, as well as organic processes of the upper cervical spine and of the occipitocervical transition. The characteristics of
facial pain
due to eye or ENT and dental lesions are described. So called atypical
facial pain
occurs quite frequently and mostly affects middle-aged women.
...
PMID:[Facial pain and neuralgias. Diagnosis and treatment.]. 1841 60
We reported a 59-year-old woman who had complained of right temporalgia for 5 years. She was first diagnosed with a carious tooth, but treatment did not alleviate the pain. She then developed right
facial pain
and numbness at the right side of the tongue tip. In spite of repetitive examinations and medications, temporalgia worsened in August, 2007. Neurological examination on admission revealed a palpable soft-to-firm tumor with tenderness at the right temporal head region, right
facial pain
radiating to the right forehead induced by tapping on the middle of the forehead, and dysesthesia at the right tip of the tongue, C-reactive protein was negative and erythrocyte sedimentation rate was normal. Ultrasonographic examination showed beads-like tumors with low-echoic lesions without blood flow. MRI demonstrated multiple small ovoid lesions in the right subcutaneous tissue of the right temporal head. Although we initially suspected
temporal arteritis
, these findings were contrary. Tumor biopsy finally revealed solitary neurofibroma of the right auriculotemporal nerve. A sporadic localized intraneural neurofibroma at the extracranial region is an uncommon entity. Furthermore, nerve sheath tumors of the trigeminal nerve rarely manifest with intermittent painful burning or crawling sensations simulating trigeminal neuralgia. The present case manifested as a tumor with tenderness at the right auriculotemporal nerve and mimicked
temporal arteritis
. Therefore, it is important to understand that neurofibroma of the auriculotemporal nerve can mimic
temporal arteritis
and manifest with trigeminal neuralgia-like pain.
...
PMID:[Solitary neurofibroma presenting as a tender soft-to-firm tumor at the temporal head region masquerading as temporal arteritis]. 1922 93
Trigeminal neuralgia (TN) complicated with
temporal arteritis
(TA) is not a common disease, but it is a very important syndrome to consider for diagnosing
facial pain
in individuals older than 50 years. We therefore report on a rare case of TN with TA that occurred simultaneously on the same side with each symptom responding to specific treatment.
...
PMID:A case of trigeminal neuralgia complicated by ipsilateral temporal arteritis. 2017 91
Facial pain
is a common presenting complaint requiring patience and diagnostic acumen. The proliferation of eponyms attached to various syndromes complicates the subject. The most frequent cause of pain is likely to be muscle spasm in masticatory or temporalis muscles. This article presents a rank order for the common causes of
facial pain
that present diagnostic difficulty, such as temporomandibular joint pain, trigeminal neuralgia,
giant cell arteritis
, and post-herpetic neuralgia.
...
PMID:Chronic facial pain: a clinical approach. 2128 80
1
2
Next >>