Early View

Headaches due to giant cell arteritis following herpes zoster ophthalmicus in an elderly patient

SC Kosa

SC Kosa

Departments of Neurology and

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BR Younge

BR Younge

Ophthalmology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA

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N Kumar

Corresponding Author

N Kumar

Departments of Neurology and

Neeraj Kumar, 200 1st Street SW, Rochester, MN 55905, USA.
Tel. + 1-507-284-8305, fax + 1-507-284-4074, e-mail [email protected]Search for more papers by this author

Abstract

Herpes zoster ophthalmicus (HZO) with post-herpetic neuralgia (PHN) and giant cell arteritis (GCA) are two diseases more commonly seen in the elderly population. Each has potentially serious and preventable visual complications by differing mechanisms. Treatments for the two diseases differ. Antiviral medications are used in HZO and high-dose corticosteroids in GCA. These two entities could potentially coexist in the same patient, leading to a complicated diagnostic scenario where a potentially treatable disease could be overlooked. Here, we report a patient who was suffering from PHN following zoster ophthalmicus who developed GCA within a time frame suggesting a potential pathogenic association with the reactivation of latent varicella zoster virus (VZV). This association could be either direct with viral vessel infiltration leading to the arteritis or by an indirect dysimmune route. A pathophysiological association with VZV leading to the development of GCA is proposed.

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