Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0344232 (blurred vision)
2,072 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Pulmonary involvement is considered to be rare in giant cell arteritis (GCA), usually occurring in the course of the disease. We describe the case of a patient who developed left pleural effusion revealing GCA. Thoracic CT scan demonstrated an abundant left pleural effusion and a thickening of the aortic wall. The patient's condition improved rapidly, with regression of pulmonary clinical features and complete clearance of pleural effusion, after institution of steroid therapy. Our case report reinforces the possibility of unusual presentation of GCA; such a diagnosis should, therefore, be considered in elderly patients presenting with pulmonary manifestations, even in the absence of typical clinical features of temporal arteritis (e.g. headache, jaw claudication, blurred vision, scalp tenderness) or polymyalgia rheumatica.
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PMID:Pleural effusion revealing giant cell arteritis. 1517 28

Medial arterial calcification, which has been increasingly recognized in end-stage renal disease (ESRD) patients, has been associated with acutely symptomatic vascular complications including calcific uremic arteriolopathy (calciphylaxis) and ischemic changes in the extremities. This report describes a 50-year-old ESRD patient on maintenance hemodialysis in whom medial arterial calcification developed with features mimicking the findings of temporal arteritis. He complained of persistent bilateral temporal area headaches with associated symptoms of blurred vision; pain in his shoulders, hips, and knees; and intermittent symptoms consistent with jaw claudication. He was not receiving calcium or vitamin D supplements. Superficial temporal arteries were dilated, tortuous, nodular, and tender to palpation. Ophthalmologic examination was unremarkable, except for the presence of peripapillary atrophy. Temporal artery biopsy results showed medial arterial calcification with mild inflammatory changes. No giant cells were identified. Additional long-term complications of medial arterial calcification have included the development of painful ischemic ulceration of the glans penis and extensive mitral annulus calcification detected by echocardiography. The findings in this patient show that clinical manifestations of medial artery calcification associated with ESRD can mimic those seen with other vascular diseases.
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PMID:Medial arterial calcification mimicking temporal arteritis. 1538 38

Giant cell arteritis (GCA) often presents with symptoms of headache, jaw claudication, polymyalgia rheumatica, and blurred vision. GCA is relatively rare and may have atypical manifestations in Asians, including multiple cranial nerve palsy and reversible proptosis. A high suspicion of GCA is suggested when any older Asian suffers from headache that is new-onset or different from the previous pattern, even without other typical manifestations of GCA.
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PMID:Giant cell arteritis with multiple cranial nerve palsy and reversible proptosis: a case report. 1805 56

Giant cell arteritis (GCA) and Takayasu arteritis (TAK) have been considered distinct disorders based on their clinical features, age of onset, and ethnic distribution. However, on closer examination, these disorders appear more similar than different. The histopathology of arterial lesions in these diseases may be indistinguishable. Imaging studies have revealed large vessel inflammation in at least 60% of patients with GCA. We questioned whether the distinctions between these diseases might in part be an artifact due to bias in gathering historical and physical data. We postulated that signs and symptoms of GCA and polymyalgia rheumatica occur in patients with TAK but have been under-reported as a result of this bias.We performed a retrospective review of 75 patients with TAK and 69 patients with GCA (per American College of Rheumatology criteria). Signs and symptoms attributable to disease within the year before and following diagnosis, treatment and interventional outcomes, and mortality were recorded using a standardized database. All cases were evaluated by a single physician, using identical history and physical examination forms for patients with both diseases.Patients were predominantly female (TAK 91%, GCA 82%) and white (TAK 88%, GCA 95%). New headache was a presenting symptom in 52% of TAK and in 70% of GCA patients. All TAK patients underwent vascular imaging studies and were demonstrated to have large vessel abnormalities. However, only a subset of patients with GCA (43/69, 62%) was similarly studied. Among this group, 73% of GCA patients had at least 1 arterial lesion identified. In both TAK and GCA, the most common sites of involvement were the aorta (TAK 77%, GCA 65%) and subclavian (TAK 65%, GCA 37%) arteries. Compared to patients with TAK, patients with GCA had a greater prevalence of jaw claudication (GCA 33%, TAK 5%), blurred vision (GCA 29%, TAK 8%), diplopia (GCA 9%, TAK 0%), and blindness (GCA 14%, TAK 0%).Symptoms, signs, and imaging abnormalities that are characteristic of GCA or TAK are often present, albeit in differing frequencies, in both disorders. These findings lend support to the hypothesis that these diseases may not be distinct entities, but represent skewed phenotypes within the spectrum of a single disorder. Differences in frequencies of manifestations may reflect a significant bias in how data are gathered for patients with each disease, as well as the influence of vascular and immunologic senescence.
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PMID:Takayasu arteritis and giant cell arteritis: a spectrum within the same disease? 1959 27

Permanent visual loss (PVL) is the most dreaded complication of giant cell arteritis (GCA). It results from anterior ischemic optic neuropathy or, less commonly, retinal artery occlusion. This complication still occurs in 14 to 20% of patients and is typically devastating and permanent, although it is highly preventable by an early diagnosis of giant cell arteritis and appropriate glucocorticoid treatment. Transient ischemic symptoms such as amaurosis fugax, episodes of blurred vision or diplopia may occur, either heralding visual loss or remaining isolated. In studies, the main predictors of PVL are jaw claudication, amaurosis fugax, lack of systemic "B" symptoms, a modestly increased ESR and a higher haemoglobin level. The evaluation of a GCA patient with PVL includes emergency fundoscopy completed by fluorescein angiography, immediate erythrocyte sedimentation rate, C-reactive protein, and complete blood count. Treatment is extremely urgent mainly because, if left untreated, GCA is associated with visual loss in the fellow eye within days in up to 50% of individuals. Treatment may begin with high-dose intravenous methylprednisolone, followed by oral prednisone administered at 1 mg/kg per day. Daily adjunctive aspirin orally may be added since it has been shown, in retrospective studies, to protect against stroke and visual loss. Although treatment duration of complicated GCA is not codified, an initial PVL deserves close monitoring of patient's systemic symptoms, ESR and CRP to avoid relapses due to a significant risk of late recurrence of visual loss during steroid tapering.
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PMID:[Ocular complications of giant cell arteritis]. 2352 78

Endovascular treatment is becoming a safe and efficacious modality in the management of carotid artery stenosis in Takayasu arteritis (TA). A 24-year-old woman of TA presented with blurred vision, recurrent syncope and upper limb claudication. Angiography revealed right CCA 95 %, left CCA 90 % stenosis and occlusion of other arch vessels. She underwent right CCA angioplasty and stenting. She developed left-sided hemi paresis. Check angiogram revealed plaque protrusion in the proximal part of the stented segment. Intra-arterial urokinase bolus was given and overlapping stenting done. Re-occlusion by plaque protrusion immediately after stenting like in our case is not reported.
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PMID:Reocclusion and stroke due to immediate plaque protrusion following endovascular treatment of carotid artery successfully treated with intra-arterial urokinase and stent in stent in a patient with Takayasu arteritis with severe disease of all arch vessels. 2356 87

Posterior Reversible Encephalopathy Syndrome (PRES) is a rare complication of Takayasu's Arteritis. A 54-year-old, right-handed woman presented with Lilliputian visual hallucinations, postprandial abdominal pain, blurred vision and headaches. She then had a tonic-clonic seizure. Neuroimaging revealed characteristic white matter oedema of the occipital lobes, in keeping with PRES. Renal infarcts and abnormalities of the abdominal aorta, subclavian, mesenteric, and internal carotid arteries were demonstrated on further imaging. The combination of hypertension, absent peripheral pulses, postprandial claudication, and imaging abnormalities of the aorta as well as its branches, lead to the diagnosis of PRES secondary to Takayasu's Arteritis. Treatment with oral steroids resulted in complete resolution of the patient's symptoms and abnormalities found on CT and MRI brain imaging. Takayasu's Arteritis is a rare vasculitis, more common in women and PRES is an unusual complication. Symptoms of PRES may include headache, seizures, hallucinations, confusion, and altered consciousness. Risk factors for PRES include; pregnancy, immunosuppression, renal disease, hypertension and rheumatological disorders. Vasogenic oedema in affected lobes, most often occipital, is characteristic of PRES on neuroimaging. Prompt treatment of PRES can avoid catastrophic consequences such as death and can achieve complete resolution of symptoms and imaging abnormalities.
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PMID:Posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome with Lilliputian hallucinations secondary to Takayasu's arteritis. 3287