Abstract

To describe characteristics and long-term outcomes of the rare symptomatic lower-limb giant-cell arteritis (LL-GCA). Retrospective analysis of 8patients (6women; mean±SD age, 63.6±10.9years; follow-up, 137.3±57.3 months). Four patients satisfied≥3 American College of Rheumatology (ACR) GCA-classification criteria; 4 had<3 criteria and histological LL-GCA proof or associated typical upper-limb involvement. Patients had 2.1±1.1 vascular risk factors. Bilateral and rapidly progressive arterial claudication was the first LL sign; 2 had rest ischemia. Imaging-visualized most-to-least frequent inflammatory lesion localizations were: superficial femoral, popliteal, tibiofibular trunk, posterior tibial arteries. All received corticosteroids for 132±76.2months; 2 required immunosuppressive agent adjunction. Only 3 required 1-6 revascularizations: twice during the first month post-diagnosis and twice later. Thromboendarterectomy and endovascular procedures did not work while bypasses were successful. LL-claudication regressed for 7 (10.5±12.1months) and disappeared for 5 (16.8±9.8months). Three patients stopped corticosteroids (26-90months), 1 restarted 45months later. Every patient relapsed once (23.9±26.7 months, mean corticosteroid dose: 0.28±0.30mg/kg/day). LL-GCA caused only 1 of the 4 deaths. Symptomatic LL-GCA attributable long-term mortality seems to be low despite frequent relapses and corticosteroid-dependence.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call