Don Gilden1, Maria A Nagel. 1. aDepartment of NeurologybDepartment of Immunology and Microbiology, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado, USA.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Giant cell arteritis (GCA) is a severe form of vasculitis in the elderly. The recent discovery of varicella zoster virus (VZV) in the temporal arteries and adjacent skeletal muscle of patients with GCA, and the rationale and strategy for antiviral and corticosteroid treatment for GCA are reviewed. RECENT FINDINGS: The clinical features of GCA include excruciating headache/head pain, often with scalp tenderness, a nodular temporal arteries and decreased temporal artery pulsations. Jaw claudication, night sweats, fever, malaise, and a history of polymyalgia rheumatica (aching and stiffness of large muscles primarily in the shoulder girdle, upper back, and pelvis without objective signs of weakness) are common. ESR and CRP are usually elevated. Diagnosis is confirmed by temporal artery biopsy which reveals vessel wall damage and inflammation, with multinucleated giant cells and/or epithelioid macrophages. Skip lesions are common. Importantly, temporal artery biopsies are pathologically negative in many clinically suspect cases. This review highlights recent virological findings in temporal arteries from patients with pathologically verified GCA and in temporal arteries from patients who manifest clinical and laboratory features of GCA, but whose temporal artery biopsies (Bx) are pathologically negative for GCA (Bx-negative GCA). Virological analysis revealed that VZV is present in most GCA-positive and GCA-negative temporal artery biopsies, mostly in skip areas that correlate with adjacent GCA pathology. SUMMARY: The presence of VZV in Bx-positive and Bx-negative GCA temporal arteries indicates that VZV triggers the immunopathology of GCA. However, the presence of VZV in about 20% of temporal artery biopsies from non-GCA postmortem controls also suggests that VZV alone is not sufficient to produce disease. Treatment trials should be performed to determine if antiviral agents confer additional benefits to corticosteroids in both Bx-positive and Bx-negative GCA patients. These studies should also examine whether oral antiviral agents and corticosteroids are as effective as intravenous acyclovir and corticosteroids. Appropriate dosage and duration of treatment also remain to be determined.
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Giant cell arteritis (GCA) is a severe form of vasculitis in the elderly. The recent discovery of varicella zoster virus (VZV) in the temporal arteries and adjacent skeletal muscle of patients with GCA, and the rationale and strategy for antiviral and corticosteroid treatment for GCA are reviewed. RECENT FINDINGS: The clinical features of GCA include excruciating headache/head pain, often with scalp tenderness, a nodular temporal arteries and decreased temporal artery pulsations. Jaw claudication, night sweats, fever, malaise, and a history of polymyalgia rheumatica (aching and stiffness of large muscles primarily in the shoulder girdle, upper back, and pelvis without objective signs of weakness) are common. ESR and CRP are usually elevated. Diagnosis is confirmed by temporal artery biopsy which reveals vessel wall damage and inflammation, with multinucleated giant cells and/or epithelioid macrophages. Skip lesions are common. Importantly, temporal artery biopsies are pathologically negative in many clinically suspect cases. This review highlights recent virological findings in temporal arteries from patients with pathologically verified GCA and in temporal arteries from patients who manifest clinical and laboratory features of GCA, but whose temporal artery biopsies (Bx) are pathologically negative for GCA (Bx-negative GCA). Virological analysis revealed that VZV is present in most GCA-positive and GCA-negative temporal artery biopsies, mostly in skip areas that correlate with adjacent GCA pathology. SUMMARY: The presence of VZV in Bx-positive and Bx-negative GCA temporal arteries indicates that VZV triggers the immunopathology of GCA. However, the presence of VZV in about 20% of temporal artery biopsies from non-GCA postmortem controls also suggests that VZV alone is not sufficient to produce disease. Treatment trials should be performed to determine if antiviral agents confer additional benefits to corticosteroids in both Bx-positive and Bx-negative GCA patients. These studies should also examine whether oral antiviral agents and corticosteroids are as effective as intravenous acyclovir and corticosteroids. Appropriate dosage and duration of treatment also remain to be determined.
Authors: Maria A Nagel; Nelly Khmeleva; Philip J Boyer; Alexander Choe; Robert Bert; Don Gilden Journal: J Neurol Sci Date: 2013-10-02 Impact factor: 3.181
Authors: Werner J D Ouwendijk; Alexander Choe; Maria A Nagel; Don Gilden; Albert D M E Osterhaus; Randall J Cohrs; Georges M G M Verjans Journal: J Virol Date: 2012-06-27 Impact factor: 5.103
Authors: D H Gilden; B K Kleinschmidt-DeMasters; M Wellish; E T Hedley-Whyte; B Rentier; R Mahalingam Journal: Neurology Date: 1996-12 Impact factor: 9.910
Authors: Don Gilden; Teresa White; Nelly Khmeleva; Anna Heintzman; Alexander Choe; Philip J Boyer; Charles Grose; John E Carpenter; April Rempel; Nathan Bos; Balasubramaniyam Kandasamy; Kelly Lear-Kaul; Dawn B Holmes; Jeffrey L Bennett; Randall J Cohrs; Ravi Mahalingam; Naresh Mandava; Charles G Eberhart; Brian Bockelman; Robert J Poppiti; Madhura A Tamhankar; Franz Fogt; Malena Amato; Edward Wood; Vikram Durairaj; Steve Rasmussen; Vigdis Petursdottir; Lea Pollak; Sonia Mendlovic; Denis Chatelain; Kathy Keyvani; Wolfgang Brueck; Maria A Nagel Journal: Neurology Date: 2015-02-18 Impact factor: 9.910
Authors: M A Nagel; R J Cohrs; R Mahalingam; M C Wellish; B Forghani; A Schiller; J E Safdieh; E Kamenkovich; L W Ostrow; M Levy; B Greenberg; A N Russman; I Katzan; C J Gardner; M Häusler; R Nau; T Saraya; H Wada; H Goto; M de Martino; M Ueno; W D Brown; C Terborg; D H Gilden Journal: Neurology Date: 2008-03-11 Impact factor: 9.910
Authors: Don Gilden; Teresa White; Philip J Boyer; Kristin M Galetta; E Tessa Hedley-Whyte; Meredith Frank; Dawn Holmes; Maria A Nagel Journal: J Infect Dis Date: 2016-03-31 Impact factor: 5.226
Authors: Maria A Nagel; Teresa White; Nelly Khmeleva; April Rempel; Philip J Boyer; Jeffrey L Bennett; Andrea Haller; Kelly Lear-Kaul; Balasurbramaniyam Kandasmy; Malena Amato; Edward Wood; Vikram Durairaj; Franz Fogt; Madhura A Tamhankar; Hans E Grossniklaus; Robert J Poppiti; Brian Bockelman; Kathy Keyvani; Lea Pollak; Sonia Mendlovic; Mary Fowkes; Charles G Eberhart; Mathias Buttmann; Klaus V Toyka; Tobias Meyer-ter-Vehn; Vigdis Petursdottir; Don Gilden Journal: JAMA Neurol Date: 2015-11 Impact factor: 18.302
Authors: Ali Manouchehrinia; Radu Tanasescu; Huner Kareem; Oltita P Jerca; Fouzia Jabeen; Rachelle Shafei; Judith Breuer; Keith Neal; William Irving; Cris S Constantinescu Journal: J Neurovirol Date: 2017-09-11 Impact factor: 2.643