Annals of Indian Academy of Neurology (Jan 2012)

Temporal arteritis: A case series from south India and an update of the Indian scenario

  • Thomas Mathew,
  • Sushanth Aroor,
  • Anup J Devasia,
  • Anita Mahadevan,
  • Vineeta Shobha,
  • Raghunandan Nadig,
  • Raji Varghese,
  • S K Shankar,
  • G. R. K. Sarma

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/0972-2327.93272
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 27 – 30

Abstract

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Objective: To study the clinical, pathological and prognostic profile of patients with temporal arteritis in India. Materials and Methods: The study was conducted in a tertiary care center from south India from 2005 to 2010 in the departments of neurology and medicine. The details of all patients that satisfied the ACR 1990 criteria for diagnosis of temporal arteritis were reviewed. The clinical presentation, laboratory parameters and biopsy findings of the patients were analyzed and compared with other studies from India done over the last decade. Results: A total of 15 patients were diagnosed with temporal arteritis. The male:female ratio was 1.5:1. The mean age of onset was 67.58 years. Mean time for detection after onset of symptoms was 2.56 months. Typical manifestations included headache (100%), temporal artery tenderness (100%), jaw claudication (20%), polymyalgia rheumatica (53%) and visual manifestations (20%). The erythrocyte sedimentation rate was elevated in all patients. Biopsy was done in 13 patients, with 11 of them being positive. All patients responded to steroids well, with most patients being symptom-free within the first 48 h of treatment. Conclusions: Temporal arteritis seems to be underdiagnosed in India, with all patients previously misdiagnosed, and with a mean time from symptom onset to diagnosis of 2.5 months. The clinical presentation of temporal arteritis in India appears to be similar to that of the West, with no gender preference and a slightly younger age group.

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