View clinical trials related to Horton Disease.
Filter by:Giant cell arteritis (GCA) or Horton's disease: frequent large vessel vasculitis (cephalic) (incidence estimated at 9 per 100,000 in France), potentially responsible for blindness. Treatment: corticosteroid therapy, which is effective in the vast majority of cases. Clinical problem: relapse; 36% to 44% of patients have a relapse that occurs in the first year for many patients, requiring a re-escalation of corticosteroid therapy, with its consequences: - Cumulative dose of corticosteroid therapy that causes cardiovascular and infectious morbidity. - Requires additional immunosuppressive treatment.
The use of ultrasonography in detecting giant cell arteritis ( GCA) is emerging. Currently, temporal biopsy is the gold standard to diagnose GCA but studies have shown the interest to use B mode ultrasonography. However, until now, the study of velocities in GCA have not been yet performed.