Des céphalées, cinq avis spécialisés: les pièges diagnostiques pour la maladie de Horton [Headaches, five expert opinions: the pitfalls involved in the diagnosis of giant cell arteritis].


Autoria(s): Haftgoli N.; Favrat B.; Pécoud A.; Cornuz J.; Vu F.
Data(s)

2011

Resumo

Giant cell arteritis (GCA) (or Horton's disease) is a systemic disease affecting the vessels of medium and large sizes. The incidence increases with age (the disease develops rarely before age 50) and the etiology remains unknown. Clinical manifestations may vary (including asthenia, temporal headache, visual disturbances, etc.) and GCA can potentially lead to dramatic consequences (permanent loss of vision). Although some anomalies in the investigations may help in the diagnosis of GCA, research and confirmation of the diagnosis of GCA may be difficult, especially when the symptoms presented by patients are spread out in time and appear to be nonspecific at first.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_23777A120472

isbn:1660-9379 (Print)

pmid:22232853

Idioma(s)

fr

Fonte

Revue Médicale Suisse, vol. 7, no. 319, pp. 2328-2331

Palavras-Chave #Expert Testimony; Female; Giant Cell Arteritis/diagnosis; Giant Cell Arteritis/etiology; Headache/complications; Humans; Middle Aged
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article