THE
UTILITY OF COLOR DUPLEX ULTRASONOGRAPHY IN THE DIAGNOSIS OF TEMPORAL ARTERITIS.
LeSar
CJ, et al. J Vasc Surg 2002 Dec;36(6):1154-60.
PURPOSE:
Temporal arteritis (TA) is frequently diagnosed with nonspecific clinical
characteristics, followed by a temporal artery biopsy to confirm the presence
of vasculitis. Consequently, numerous screening surgical biopsies are performed
with a high negative-biopsy rate. A prospective study was performed evaluating
color duplex ultrasound scan (CDU) as the preferred method for the diagnosis of
vasculitis in the evaluation of suspected TA.
METHODS:
Thirty-two patients with suspected TA on the basis of clinical criteria were
evaluated with CDU before a temporal artery biopsy. The presence of a
hypoechoic "halo," suggesting edema of the inflamed vessel, and
inflammatory stenoses were noted. Histologic examinations of standard temporal
artery biopsies then were performed, and the results were compared with the CDU
findings. In addition, a metaanalysis was performed to identify articles
related to the use of ultrasound scan in the detection of TA.
RESULTS:
All patients completed a bilateral CDU examination of the temporal arteries,
and in 75% of patients biopsied, no evidence of vasculitis was found at
histologic examination. When CDU examined for halo alone as the determinant for
disease, the sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV), and
negative predictive value (NPV), compared with histologic confirmation of TA,
were 85.7%, 92.0%, 75.0%, and 95.8%, respectively. With the criteria for a halo
sign present, an inflammatory stenosis present, or both present on CDU, the
sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and NPV were 100%, 80.0%,
58.3%, and 100%, respectively.
CONCLUSION:
CDU is a superior noninvasive method of determining the presence of vasculitis
when compared with routine surgical biopsy. Examination of the temporal artery
with CDU can effectively predict which patient will need surgical biopsy. The
utility of CDU in the diagnosis of TA is maintained by a high sensitivity in
detecting patients with the disease and also by a high NPV that can eliminate
patients who would not benefit from biopsy.
COMMENTS:
This is an interesting study. However, as with most things dealing with ultrasound,
the result is highly operator dependent.