Temporal Arteritis | Vasculitis Mnemonic
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 Published On Feb 14, 2019

Temporal Arteritis (also known as Giant Cell Arteritis) is a large vessel vasculitis that characteristically involves the temporal artery; it is also commonly associated with polymyalgia rheumatica (PMR). Temporal arteritis most often affects blood vessels of the head and neck, which explains many of its signs and symptoms. Perhaps most obviously, temporal arteritis presents as unilateral headache with temporal artery tenderness. Additionally, jaw claudication (otherwise known as pain with chewing) is another common feature. Ophthalmic artery involvement can lead to the dire complication of blindness, so patients with temporal arteritis should be treated promptly with high dose corticosteroids. Gold standard diagnosis is based on biopsy, which reveals focal granulomatous inflammation with giant cells. Since the inflammation is focal, short biopsies may miss the inflammation and consequently miss the diagnosis; therefore, longer biopsies may be needed. It is also worth mentioning that patients with suspected temporal arteritis should be treated before biopsy, given the possible complication of blindness.

Learn about Giant Cell Arteritis / Temporal Arteritis and other medical school topics with Pixorize's USMLE Step 1 mnemonics. Part of our Vasculitides playlist for the USMLE Step 1 exam.

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