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

Oculomotor nerve paresis, ocular hypotony, anterior segment ischemia, and the ocular ischemic syndrome are uncommon manifestations of giant cell arteritis. Four patients with these findings had giant cell arteritis documented by temporal artery biopsy. Cerebral angiography or ultrasonography, or both, performed in three patients, excluded hemodynamically significant stenosis of the internal carotid artery as the cause of ocular ischemia and cerebral aneurysms as the cause of oculomotor nerve paresis. Corticosteroid treatment, administered to three patients, resulted in resolution of the oculomotor deficits and the clinical signs of ocular ischemia, although the visual acuity in one patient improved from 20/400 to 20/60. Giant cell arteritis should be considered in the differential diagnosis of the ocular ischemic syndrome.
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PMID:Giant cell arteritis in the ocular ischemic syndrome. 159 63

A 61-year-old woman with Addison's disease and malignant lymphoma for several years was admitted to hospital with a 2-month history of fatigue and a 7 kg weight loss. The erythrocyte sedimentation rate was 92 mm h-1 and a temporal biopsy was performed as a part of the clinical investigation. She suddenly suffered a paresis of the right arm, sudden blindness and her blood pressure fell to 100/60 mmHg. Hydrocortisone was given intravenously followed by betamethasone, and an Addison crisis as well as a giant cell arteritis (GCA) was suspected. Activity in the malignant lymphoma was also a possibility. The patient did not improve and died 8 d later. The temporal biopsy indicated GCA. The autopsy showed a pronounced intimal inflammatory reaction of the intracerebral arteries and an infarction in the left posterior hemisphere. A possible link between GCA and other autoimmune diseases is discussed.
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PMID:Addison's disease, malignant lymphoma and death from cerebral giant cell arteritis. 279 51

OBJECTIVES: The authors described a case of Riedel's thyroiditis, a relatively rare disease affecting the thyroid gland. RESULTS: A 38-year-old female was diagnosed with Riedel's thyroiditis by a frozen section examination during attempted surgery for the suspicion of malignancy. The histopathologic examination confirmed the diagnosis of Riedel's thyroiditis combined with signs of giant cell arteritis. After hemithyroidectomy, the patient had paresis of the recurrent laryngeal nerve for five days and signs of hypothyroidism and hypoparathyroidism for three months after surgery. The level of thyroid peroxidase antibodies titer was higher. The patient had no compression symptoms, no signs of systemic immunopathology, and no signs of extracervical fibrosis. She was put on prednison 5 mg daily. CONCLUSIONS: Riedel's thyroiditis can be looked upon as a cervical fibrosis of unknown etiology affecting the thyroid. In our case it was combined with signs of giant cell arteritis.
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PMID:CASE REPORT: Invasive fibrous thyroiditis (Riedel's disease) with signs of giant cell arteritis. 1145 35

We report a 73-year-old patient with giant cell arteritis who presented with right arm paresis and dysarthria. Vasculitis of the vertebral arteries induced multiple ischemic cerebral lesions in the vertebrobasilar territory, ultimately leading to death despite intensive immunosuppressive therapy. This case illustrates that prompt relief from symptoms of giant cell arteritis upon steroid treatment does not correspond to a remission of the vasculitic process itself. Clinicians should therefore be aware of the possible occult involvement of the vertebral or other major arteries.
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PMID:[Multiple ischemic vertebrobasilar lesions in temporal arteritis]. 1590 93

Giant cell arteritis is a rare systemic vasculitis affecting large- and medium-sized arteries. Focal arteries lesions, include mononuclear cells infiltration of the vessel wall with giant cell formation. It is a disease of elderly persons and can result in a wide variety of systemic, neurological and ophthalmic complications, due to ischemia. The incidence of visual loss and ocular involvement varies between 14-88%, but one of the most common and severe complications is anterior ischemic optic neuropathy. The other ocular ischemic lesions include: central retinal artery occlusion, choroidal ischemia, diplopia, ocular motor paresis, anterior uveitis, cataract, ocular hypotony, corneal oedema and ulcerations, episcleritis and anterior scleritis, orbital cellulitis and pseudotumor. Because giant cell arteritis is potentially blinding disease, early diagnosis and immediate treatment with high dose corticosteroids may prevent further damage to the affected eye and prevent visual loss in the opposite eye. The purpose of this review is to revise established knowledge and to highlight the recent developments in diagnosis and management of giant cell arteritis.
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PMID:[A new approach towards giant cell arteritis]. 1702 3

We report the rare case of an 80-year-old male patient with hypertrophic pachymeningoencephalitis that may be associated with temporal arteritis. The patient presented to our neurological department with a 2-week history of latent paresis and ataxia affecting his right hand. He had been diagnosed with temporal arteritis 12 years earlier. Brain MRI showed an enhancement of the left-sided frontoparietal meninges with oedema of the adjacent tissue of the precentral and postcentral cortex. A leptomeningeal biopsy was performed. An autoimmune-mediated immunoglobulin G4-associated hypertrophic pachymeningoencephalitis was diagnosed. The patient received a high-dose corticosteroid therapy and his symptoms gradually improved. Our results suggest that hypertrophic pachymeningoencephalitis may occur as a complication of giant cell arteritis and may cause central neurological deficits by cerebral perifocal oedema.
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PMID:Hypertrophic pachymeningoencephalitis associated with temporal giant cell arteritis. 3026 24