The significance of color duplex ultrasonography for the diagnosis of temporal arteritis

Journal: Rinsho Shinkeigaku = Clinical Neurology
Published:
Abstract

We examined the usefulness of color duplex ultrasonography in patients suspected of having temporal arteritis. Five patients, who were all aged 70 or older, developed a new onset of localized headache with temporal artery abnormalities, and had an elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate of > 100 mm/hour. The final diagnoses were temporal arteritis in three patients, polymyalgia rheumatica in one, and probable healed temporal arteritis in one. Color duplex ultrasonography showed stenoses, which were confirmed histologically as well, in the superficial temporal artery of all patients. The characteristic findings of active temporal arteritis were, however, demonstrated in only three biopsy specimens, and in the remaining two the stenoses were thought to be related to previous arteritis. The hypoechoic halo, which has been reported to be a characteristic finding of color duplex ultrasonography in active temporal arteritis, was detected in only one patient with active temporal arteritis and another one with probable healed temporal arteritis. No stenoses were demonstrated in the superficial temporal arteries of 30 control subjects (20 with at least one risk factor of atherosclerosis and 10 without it). Color duplex ultrasonography can therefore be considered a powerful method for detecting stenoses in the superficial temporal artery. Its ability to identify their etiology is, however, unsatisfactory, so that temporal artery biopsy remains undoubtedly the most reliable test for etiological evaluation. We thus recommend color duplex ultrasonography as a supplementary method for the diagnosis of temporal arteritis, because it can provide useful information concerning the appropriate site of temporal artery biopsy.

Authors
M Ihara, C Yanagihara, N Takeda, K Hashimoto, Y Nishimura