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Cite this: Ultrasound-Aided Diagnosis of Giant Cell Arteritis Proves Accurate, Avoids Biopsy - Medscape - May 13, 2024. Comments Commenting is limited to medical professionals.
Cranial ultrasound may replace temporal artery biopsy in diagnosis of giant cell arteritis Non-invasive test more sensitive and equally specific compared to current gold standard ...
Key takeaways: GCA diagnoses made via temporal artery ultrasound were maintained at 1 month and 2 years. Ultrasound may speed up diagnostics and reduce need for biopsy and potential resulting ...
Can Imaging Replace Biopsy for GCA Diagnosis? — Ultrasound, PET/CT may offer advantages by Howard Wolinsky, Contributing Writer, MedPage Today October 22, 2018 ...
Cranial ultrasound may replace temporal artery biopsy in diagnosis of giant cell arteritis. ScienceDaily. Retrieved June 2, 2025 from www.sciencedaily.com / releases / 2014 / 06 / 140612085351.htm.
A negative biopsy finding does not rule out giant-cell arteritis; however, biopsy identifies 85 to 95% of cases. 14 Temporal arteries are frequently not involved in patients with giant-cell ...
SEVILLE, Spain — In this Healio Video Perspective, Andrew G. Lee, MD, discusses whether temporal artery ultrasound can be used in place of temporal artery biopsy in the diagnosis of giant cell ...
Specialists at the Moran Eye Center at the University of Utah discuss the symptoms, diagnosis, and treatment of giant cell arteritis (GCA), and research into ophthalmic ultrasound as a more accessible ...
Using cranial ultrasound can provide greater sensitivity in the diagnosis of Giant Cell Arteritis (GCA) compared to temporal artery biopsy, a new study presented at the European League Against ...
For the diagnosis of GCA the ACR classification criteria are still used, but are less helpful for classifying GCA without temporal arteritis. Comments 3090D553-9492-4563-8681-AD288FA52ACE ...
Temporal artery biopsy samples from GCA patients showed heightened expression of p16 and p21 proteins, both considered drivers of cellular senescence, relative to age-matched controls, ...
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