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Review
. 1998 Nov;149(7):448-53.

[Principles of acute treatment of Horton's disease. Role of high-dose corticosteroid therapy]

[Article in French]
Affiliations
  • PMID: 9921399
Review

[Principles of acute treatment of Horton's disease. Role of high-dose corticosteroid therapy]

[Article in French]
J H Barrier et al. Ann Med Interne (Paris). 1998 Nov.

Abstract

Corticosteroid therapy, the elective treatment for temporal arteritis, can produce adverse effects on bone in this elderly population which usually occur late after acute high-dose administration. Such adverse effects are exceptional and generally have little impact as long as certain cortisone-sparing principles are followed: duration of acute treatments should be as short as possible; dosage can be tapered off rapidly, cutting the acute dose in half in 4 weeks; to titrate dosage, inflammatory proteins should be monitored (especially CRP because of its rapid kinetics and sometimes another protein with slower kinetics); this appears to be more useful for cortisone-sparing than the classical method based on clinical analysis and sedimentation rate; acute regimens should be accompanied by anticoagulation until figrinogen has returned to normal levels; clinical relapses during treatment are usually benign and can generally be controlled by raising the dose slightly; in case of failure due to an acute flare-up far from corticosteroid administration, it would be interesting to study the cortisone sparing effect of giving a 240 mg i.v. bolus of methylprednisolone followed by low-dose corticosteroids; if the relapse is only expressed in laboratory tests, holding the dose at same plateau for two weeks generally leads to spontaneous normalization. Intravenous bolus methlyprednisolone is well tolerated in this population of elderly patients. There is no recognized indication in the uncomplicated forms of temporal arteritis. The cortisone-sparing effect of this technique may result from the fact that the acute oral dose can be reduced. Complicated forms, particularly with ocular involvement, are recognized indications for bolus administration although the administration modalities have not yet been validated. In patients with overt ocular involvement, repeating emergency high-dose i.v. boluses every 6 to 8 hours warrants evaluation with the objective of recovering visual function.

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