Giant Cell Arteritis Flashcards

1
Q

Define Giant Cell Arteritis

A

Granulomatous vasculitis of large and medium-sized arteries, primarily affecting the branches of the external carotid artery (temporal)

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2
Q

Aetiology of Giant Cell Arteritis

A

Unknown

Associated with infectious agents (mycoplasma pneumoniae, parvovirus) and genetic HLA alleles

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3
Q

Risk factors for Giant Cell Arteritis

A
<50 
Female
Genetic factors
Smoking 
Atherosclerosis
Infectious agents
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4
Q

Epidemiology of Giant Cell Arteritis

A

Most common form of vasculitis in adults
Typically those 50 or older
More common in women

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5
Q

Symptoms of Giant Cell Arteritis

A

Headache (subacute onset (few weeks) | temporal/occipital area, scalp | temporal tenderness e.g. combing hair, brushing teeth | Jaw and tongue claudication)
Visual disturbances: blurred vision, sudden blindness in one eye (amaurosis fugax)
Systemic: malaise, fever, lethargy, weight loss, depression
Polymyalgia rheumatica symptoms: early morning pain and stiffness of muscles of shoulder + pelvic girdle
Cough, sore throat, hoarseness

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6
Q

Signs of Giant Cell Arteritis on examination

A

Swelling and erythema of the temporal artery area
Thickened non-pulsatile temporal artery
Bruit auscultation (carotid, supraclavicular, axillary or brachial areas)
Asymmetric blood pressure
Limited active range of movement of shoulders and hips
Wrist and knee swelling

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7
Q

Investigations for Giant Cell Arteritis

A

ESR: raised (>50mm/hour)
Temporal artery biopsy: +ve, histopathology shows granulomatous inflammation, multinucleated giant cells (50%) (within 48hrs of starting steroids)

FBC: normocytic anaemia
CRP: elevated
LFTs: ALT/AST/ALP elevated

Temporal artery USS: wall thickening (Halo sign), stenosis or occlusion

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8
Q

Management for Giant Cell Arteritis

A
  1. High dose oral prednisolone to prevent visual loss (lower dose gradually according to symptoms + ESR)
  2. Low dose aspirin + PPI
  3. Osteoporosis prevention (calcium, vit D, bisphosphonates)
  4. IV pulse methylprednisolone (if there is visual loss -> oral prednisolone
  5. Annual CXR (up to 10 years) for thoracic artery aneurysms
  6. Recurrent/relapsing/steroid intolerence disease -> tocilizumab, methotrexate
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9
Q

Complications of Giant Cell Arteritis

A

Untreated: irreversible loss of vision (ophthalmic artery involvement)
Carotid or aortic aneurysm
Thrombosis -> recanalisation or embolism to the ophthalmic artery

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10
Q

Prognosis of Giant Cell Arteritis

A

Lasts around 2 years before complete remission

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