1. Giant cell arteritis mimicking infiltrative leptomeningeal disease of the optic nerves.
- Author
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Kornberg MD, Ratchford JN, Subramaniam RM, and Probasco JC
- Subjects
- Aged, Biopsy, Diagnosis, Differential, Fluorodeoxyglucose F18, Giant Cell Arteritis complications, Humans, Male, Meningeal Carcinomatosis complications, Methylprednisolone administration & dosage, Methylprednisolone therapeutic use, Positron-Emission Tomography methods, Temporal Arteries diagnostic imaging, Giant Cell Arteritis diagnosis, Giant Cell Arteritis diagnostic imaging, Meningeal Carcinomatosis diagnosis, Optic Nerve pathology, Temporal Arteries pathology, Vision Disorders etiology
- Abstract
A 67-year-old man presented with several days of progressive, painless left eye vision loss. He reported mild jaw claudication but denied headache, scalp tenderness or constitutional symptoms. Examination revealed palpable temporal arteries, blurring of the left optic disc, and 20/100 vision in the left eye with mild relative afferent pupillary defect. Inflammatory markers were sent, and methylprednisolone was initiated for presumptive giant cell arteritis (GCA). Erythrocyte sedimentation rate was normal, however, and C reactive protein was only mildly elevated, prompting further investigation. Orbital MRI revealed nodular enhancement of the optic nerve sheaths bilaterally from optic nerve head to chiasm, raising concern for an infiltrative leptomeningeal process such as sarcoidosis or lymphoma. Methylprednisolone was temporarily stopped while a broad work up for inflammatory and neoplastic causes was pursued. Fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography ultimately revealed hypermetabolism in the temporal, ophthalmic and occipital arteries suggesting GCA, which was confirmed by temporal artery biopsy. Steroids were restarted, and the patient's vision stabilised., (2015 BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.)
- Published
- 2015
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