منابع مشابه
Electron microscopy of giant-cell (temporal) arteritis.
Definitive histological studies of giant-cell (temporal) arteritis have been published by several workers (Harrison, 1948; Heptinstall, Porter, and Barkley, 1954; McCormick and Neuberger, 1958). The lesions are fairly uniform and have involved all layers of many different arteries and veins-large and small, intracranial as well as extracranial. The distinctive histological finding in this disea...
متن کاملTakayasu's arteritis and giant cell (temporal or cranial) arteritis.
Takayasu's arteritis (TA), of which the first case was described by Takayasu in 1905 (1), is a chronic inflammatory disease of unknown etiology that primarily involves the aorta, its major branches, and the pulmonary and coronary arteries. Synonymssuch as aortic arch syndrome, pulseless disease and aortitis syndrome reflect this anatomic localization. TAappears to be most commonin East Asia inc...
متن کاملPolymyalgia Rheumatica (PMR) — Comparison to Temporal Arteritis (Giant Cell Arteritis)
Giant cell arteritis (a.k.a., Horton’s temporal arteritis) belongs to the vasculitis group of diseases and affects the great vessels, especially branches of the carotid arteries in the head. Polymyalgia rheumatica (PMR) was formerly regarded as an independent disease. Nowadays, due to shared accumulations, it is also commonly assumed that these two diseases are caused by identical pathogeneses,...
متن کاملGiant-Cell or Temporal Arteritis: a Review.
The first case of what is now known as temporal, cranial, or giant-cell arteritis was published in 1890 by Jonathan Hutchinson. He described how the 80-year-old father of a London Hospital bedle came to him complaining that he could not put his hat on because of painful swellings in his temples. These proved to be red, inflamed, swollen temporal arteries which subsequently lost their pulsations...
متن کاملPolymyalgia Rheumatica (PMR) — Comparison to Temporal Arteritis (Giant Cell Arteritis)
Giant cell arteritis (a.k.a., Horton’s temporal arteritis) belongs to the vasculitis group of diseases and affects the great vessels, especially branches of the carotid arteries in the head. Polymyalgia rheumatica (PMR) was formerly regarded as an independent disease. Nowadays, due to shared accumulations, it is also commonly assumed that these two diseases are caused by identical pathogeneses,...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: RAED Dergisi
سال: 2015
ISSN: 1301-4021
DOI: 10.2399/raed.15.54254