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(Barré) #1
DIAGNOSIS/TREATMENT
■ CT or MRI to confirm presence of mass
■ Urgent neurosurgical evaluation
■ Dexamethasone if edema present on imaging or if severe symptoms

Temporal Arteritis

Temporal arteritis is an arteritis of small and medium-sized arteries that selec-
tively involves arterial walls with significant amounts of elastin. The disease
occurs predominantly in women and is rare in patients <50 years old.

SYMPTOMS/EXAM
■ Severe, throbbing, frontotemporal headache
■ Jaw claudication, systemic symptoms, or polymyalgia rheumatica may be
present.
■ Temporal artery may be nonpulsatile or tender.

DIAGNOSIS
■ Three of five criteria:
■ Age >50
■ New onset localized headache
■ Temporal artery tenderness or decreased pulse
■ Erythrocyte sedimentation rate >50 mm/hour
■ Abnormal arterial biopsy findings

NEUROLOGY


FIGURE 15.5. Noncontrast head CT demonstrating chronic subdural hematoma.

(Reproduced, with permission, from Aminoff MJ, Greenberg DA, Simon RP. Clinical
Neurology,6th ed. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2005:61.)
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