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  4. GCA Giant Cell Arteritis

GCA Giant Cell Arteritis

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  • C Offline
    C Offline
    CHAS
    wrote last edited by
    #1

    Yesterday I went to an eye clinic and was told that my continuing eye trouble may be due to a potential Giant Cell Arteritis, as in aneurysm.
    Going back Thursday for an exam by an opthalmic surgeon.
    Seems what I thought was a super sinus infection was and infection plus.
    Anyone have experience with this?

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    • wtgW Offline
      wtgW Offline
      wtg
      wrote last edited by wtg
      #2

      @chas I pinged my eye researcher friend Dr Mary (PhD, not MD, but she regularly saw patients in the eye clinics at the universities where she worked). Hopefully she'll get back to me soon!

      C 1 Reply Last reply
      • wtgW wtg

        @chas I pinged my eye researcher friend Dr Mary (PhD, not MD, but she regularly saw patients in the eye clinics at the universities where she worked). Hopefully she'll get back to me soon!

        C Offline
        C Offline
        CHAS
        wrote last edited by
        #3

        @wtg Thank you .
        Learning more online
        An MRI is being scheduled

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        • MikM Offline
          MikM Offline
          Mik
          wrote last edited by Mik
          #4

          Did they put you on prednisone?

          Per Gemini:

          Let me try to format this as something useful.

          “I refuse to answer that question on the grounds that I don't know the answer”
          ― Douglas Adams

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          • MikM Offline
            MikM Offline
            Mik
            wrote last edited by
            #5

            The Medical Context (Giant Cell Arteritis)

            If "GCA" refers to Giant Cell Arteritis (Temporal Arteritis), "fixing" it is a time-sensitive medical emergency to halt systemic blood vessel inflammation and protect the patient's sight.

            1. Emergency Systemic Suppression

            • Immediate High-Dose Glucocorticoids: If GCA is highly suspected, treatment must start immediately—even before a biopsy confirms it—to mitigate the risk of permanent blindness.
            • Oral Protocol: Usually initiates with high-dose oral prednisone (typically 40–60 mg daily).
            • IV Pulse Protocol: If the patient is already presenting with acute visual changes or transient vision loss, they require immediate admission for intravenous "pulse" therapy (typically methylprednisolone 1,000 mg daily for 3 consecutive days) to protect the optic nerve.

            2. Confirming with a Temporal Artery Biopsy

            While blood work looking for elevated inflammatory markers like Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate ($ESR$) and C-Reactive Protein ($CRP$) helps guide suspicion, a temporal artery biopsy remains a gold standard for definitive diagnosis.

            1. Locate & Mark: Pre-op.
              The surgeon uses a Doppler ultrasound to locate the superficial temporal artery on the side of the forehead and marks the path.

            2. Local Anesthesia: Incision Prep.
              A local anesthetic is injected around the marked path to numb the area completely while keeping the patient awake.

            3. Isolate & Resect: Surgical Execution.
              A small incision is made along the temple. The surgeon isolates a small segment of the artery (ideally 1 to 2 cm to account for "skip lesions" where inflammation is patchy), ties off the remaining ends safely, and removes the sample.

            4. Closure & Pathology: Post-op.
              The skin is closed with stitches or staples, and the tissue sample is sent to pathology to look for inflammatory giant cell infiltration in the vessel wall.

            3. Long-Term Maintenance and Tapering

            • The 12-to-18-Month Taper: Steroids cannot be stopped abruptly. Once inflammatory markers return to normal and symptoms disappear, the dose is incredibly slowly tapered over a year or longer to prevent dangerous adrenal drops and disease flares.
            • Steroid-Sparing Biologics: To minimize the systemic side effects of long-term high-dose steroids (such as osteoporosis, hyperglycemia, and hypertension), an IL-6 receptor antagonist like Tocilizumab is frequently introduced as an adjunct therapy.

            Which of these frameworks matches the problem you are trying to solve right now?

            “I refuse to answer that question on the grounds that I don't know the answer”
            ― Douglas Adams

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