Giant Cell Arteritis Flashcards

1
Q

What is Temporal Arteritis?

A

AI granulomatous vasculitis affecting medium + large-sized vessels arteries

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2
Q

Describe the epidemiology of Temporal arteritis

A

> 50s
F > M

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3
Q

List 5 symptoms of Temporal arteritis

A

Headache
Scalp pain/ tenderness
Jaw claudication
Features of PMR
Systemic Sx: low-grade fever, anorexia, night sweats, fatigue

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4
Q

Give 2 features of PMR that may be seen in patients with temporal arteritis

A

Aching
Morning stiffness in proximal limb muscles (not weakness)

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5
Q

What accounts for the majority of ocular complications in temporal arteritis? What causes this? What is seen on fundoscopy?

A

Anterior ischemic optic neuropathy
Results from occlusion of the posterior ciliary artery (a branch of the ophthalmic artery)
→ ischaemia of optic nerve head. Fundoscopy: swollen pale disc + blurred margins

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6
Q

What visual symptoms may arise in temporal arteritis?

A

Amaurosis fugax (transient visual loss)
Diplopia
Changes to colour vision
Partial/ complete loss of vision

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7
Q

What is the most feared complication of temporal arteritis?

A

Permanent visual loss
May develop suddenly

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8
Q

Describe management of suspected temporal arteritis

A

Immediate HIGH DOSE steroids
(prior to further Ix)
To reduce risk of permanent visual loss + cerebral ischaemia

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9
Q

Describe the route of administration of high dose steroids in suspected temporal arteritis

A

No visual loss: Prednisolone 40-60mg PO OD
Visual loss: pulse therapy with Methylprednisolone IV (before PO Pred)

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10
Q

What bloods are performed in temporal arteritis?

A

FBC: normal/ normocytic anaemia
CRP + ESR: raised

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11
Q

What imaging is performed in temporal arteritis?

A

Vascular US (1st line if available)

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12
Q

What is seen on vascular ultrasonography in temporal arteritis?

A

Wall thickening (non-compressible Halo sign)

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13
Q

What is the gold standard test for definitively diagnosing temporal arteritis ?

A

Temporal artery biopsy
(may be falsely negative due to skip lesions)

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14
Q

Describe management of Temporal arteritis

A

Prednisolone 40-60mg PO OD
Should be dramatic response, if not consider ddx
Slowly taper to lowest dose needed to control Sx

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15
Q

Describe management of ocular symptoms in Temporal arteritis

A

Same-day ophthal review
(Visual damage is often irreversible)

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16
Q

What should be co-prescribed alongside steroids in management of temporal arteritis?

A

Bisphosphonates (bone protection)
as long, tapering course of steroids