2010
DOI: 10.1002/bjs.7252
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Role of ultrasonography in the diagnosis of temporal arteritis

Abstract: Duplex ultrasonography was relatively accurate for diagnosing temporal arteritis. It should become the first-line investigation, with biopsy reserved for patients with a negative scan.

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Cited by 163 publications
(90 citation statements)
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“…Three meta-analyses have supported the role of ultrasound in the diagnosis of GCA. [16][17][18] The presence of bilateral ultrasound abnormalities (both temporal arteries involved) provides high specificity (100%) for the diagnosis of GCA, but its sensitivity was 43%. 17 Two of the meta-analyses reported concerns with the quality of the included studies 16,18 and the third did not assess the methodological quality of the included studies.…”
Section: Ultrasound and Other Forms Of Imaging Compared With The Tradmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Three meta-analyses have supported the role of ultrasound in the diagnosis of GCA. [16][17][18] The presence of bilateral ultrasound abnormalities (both temporal arteries involved) provides high specificity (100%) for the diagnosis of GCA, but its sensitivity was 43%. 17 Two of the meta-analyses reported concerns with the quality of the included studies 16,18 and the third did not assess the methodological quality of the included studies.…”
Section: Ultrasound and Other Forms Of Imaging Compared With The Tradmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[16][17][18] The presence of bilateral ultrasound abnormalities (both temporal arteries involved) provides high specificity (100%) for the diagnosis of GCA, but its sensitivity was 43%. 17 Two of the meta-analyses reported concerns with the quality of the included studies 16,18 and the third did not assess the methodological quality of the included studies. 17 Currently, the use of ultrasound as a diagnostic tool for GCA is relatively limited, perhaps as a result of practical reasons relating to training to use ultrasound or equipment availability to facilitate rapid access and evaluation of patients with suspected GCA.…”
Section: Ultrasound and Other Forms Of Imaging Compared With The Tradmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It may present with vascular insufficiency and/or constitutional symptoms. Methods used in the evaluation of GCA are temporal artery biopsy, color duplex ultrasonography, angiography, MRI, scintigraphy, FDG-PET, and integrated FDG-PET/CT [8,18,19]. Temporal artery biopsy is still the gold standard for diagnosing GCA.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However most of the studies included in this meta-analysis were small, of modest quality and with a considerable degree of heterogeneity. Two further meta-analysis were published more recently in 2010 (Arida et al, 2010;Ball et al, 2010). In the first one, the sensitivity and specificity of the halo sign versus the ACRC as a reference standard were examined.…”
Section: Sensitivity and Specificity Of Cdus In Tamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Compared with final diagnosis, sensitivity and specificity resulted of 68% and 91% for the presence of unilateral halo, and of 43% and 100% for bilateral halo, respectively. In the second meta-analysis performed by Ball and coll., (Ball et al, 2010), all studies in english language published up to 2009 with a minimum of 5 patients and using TA biopsy and/or ACRC criteria as the reference standard were included. When the halo sign was compared with TA biopsy, the weighted sensitivity and specificity resulted 75% and 83% respectively.…”
Section: Sensitivity and Specificity Of Cdus In Tamentioning
confidence: 99%