Author/Authors :
Magalhães, Pedro Servico de Cardiologia - Centro Hospitalar De Trás-Os-Montes E Alto Douro, Portugal , Morais, Anabela Servico de Medicina Interna - Centro Hospitalar de Tras-os-Montes e Alto Douro, Portugal , Carvalho, Sofia Servico de Cardiologia - Centro Hospitalar De Trás-Os-Montes E Alto Douro, Portugal , Cunha, Joana Servico de Medicina Interna - Centro Hospitalar de Tras-os-Montes e Alto Douro, Portugal , Lima, Ana R. Servico de Medicina Interna - Centro Hospitalar de Tras-os-Montes e Alto Douro, Portugal , Ilídio Moreira, J. Servico de Cardiologia - Centro Hospitalar De Trás-Os-Montes E Alto Douro, Portugal , Faria, Trigo Servico de Medicina Interna - Centro Hospitalar de Tras-os-Montes e Alto Douro, Portugal
Abstract :
Chest pain is one of the most frequent patient’s complaints. The commonest underlying causes are well known, but, sometimes,
in some clinical scenarios, it is necessary to consider other diagnoses. We report a case of a 68-year-old Caucasian male,
chronically hypertensive, who complained of recurrent episodes of chest pain and fever with elevated acute phase reactants. The
first investigation was negative for some of the most likely diagnosis and he quickly improved with anti-inflammatory drugs. Over a
few months, his symptoms continued to recur periodically, his hypertension was aggravated, and he developed headaches and lower
limbs claudication. After a temporal artery biopsy that was negative for vasculitis, he underwent a positron emission tomography
suggestive of Takayasu Arteritis. Takayasu Arteritis is a rare chronic granulomatous vasculitis of the aorta and its first-order branches
affecting mostly females up to 50 years old. Chest pain is experienced by >40% of the patients and results from the inflammation
of the aorta, pulmonary artery, or coronaries.