temporal arteritis in Vietnamese

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Sentence patterns related to "temporal arteritis"

Below are sample sentences containing the word "temporal arteritis" from the English - Vietnamese Medical Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "temporal arteritis", or refer to the context using the word "temporal arteritis" in the English - Vietnamese Medical Dictionary.

1. Symptoms of temporal Arteritis The symptoms of temporal Arteritis depend on which arteries are affected.

2. Temporal Arteritis is also called giant cell Arteritis and cranial Arteritis.

3. Temporal Arteritis is a form of vasculitis (inflammation of the blood vessels)

4. Giant cell Arteritis is also referred to as cranial Arteritis or temporal Arteritis.

5. Giant cell Arteritis (GCA), also called temporal Arteritis, is an inflammatory disease of large blood vessels

6. Temporal Arteritis (giant cell Arteritis or cranial Arteritis) is an inflammation of the lining of your arteries

7. Absolute: prior injury to the flap or flap pedicle, temporal arteritis, Moyamoya syndrome, defects with volume deficit.

8. Temporal Arteritis, now known as giant cell Arteritis, is a form of vasculitis, or blood vessel inflammation

9. Giant cell Arteritis (GCA), also known as temporal Arteritis, causes inflammation of major arteries in the head, neck and arms

10. Temporal Arteritis, also known as giant cell Arteritis, is an inflammation of the arteries around the scalp and neck region

11. Temporal Arteritis (giant cell Arteritis) is where the arteries, particularly those at the side of the head (the temples), become inflamed

12. Temporal Arteritis can cause a wide variety of symptoms that may affect the eyes, head, face and body in general

13. Giant cell Arteritis (GCA), or temporal Arteritis, is an inflammatory disease affecting the large blood vessels of the scalp, neck and arms

14. Temporal Arteritis is a relatively uncommon disorder, but it is the most frequent cause of vasculitis (an inflammation of the blood vessels)

15. While temporal Arteritis isn’t a common disorder, your risk of having it increases after age 50, and women have higher risk than

16. Temporal Arteritis causes inflammation that damages large and medium-sized arteries. The name of the condition stems from the fact that some of …

17. Temporal Arteritis (giant cell Arteritis, and also called Arteritis cranialis, Horton disease, granulomatous Arteritis, and Arteritis of the aged) is a type of vascular inflammation that frequently occurs in older people and damages medium- and large-sized arteries.It is called temporal Arteritis because it often affects the arteries in the head, near the temples.

18. Giant cell Arteritis, also known as temporal Arteritis or cranial Arteritis, is a vasculitis of the large and medium arteries of the head and neck

19. Giant cell Arteritis is inflammation and damage to the blood vessels that supply blood to the head, neck, upper body and arms. It is also called temporal Arteritis.

20. Temporal Arteritis (TA), also called giant cell Arteritis (GCA) or cranial Arteritis, is a systemic inflammatory vasculitis of medium and large-sized arteries occurring most frequently in adults

21. In temporal Arteritis, also known as giant cell Arteritis or Horton's Arteritis, the temporal arteries (the blood vessels near the temples), which supply blood from the heart to the scalp, are …

22. Giant cell Arteritis, also called temporal Arteritis, is a disease that causes your arteries -- blood vessels that carry oxygen from your heart to the rest of your body -- to become inflamed

23. Temporal Arteritis a chronic vascular disease of unknown origin, occurring in the elderly, characterized by severe headache, fever, and accumulation of giant cells in the walls of medium-sized arteries, especially the temporal arteries

24. In temporal arteritis, also known as giant cell arteritis or Horton's arteritis, the temporal Arteries (the blood vessels near the temples), which supply blood from the heart to the scalp, are inflamed (swollen) and constricted (narrowed).

25. DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS OF EYE SYMPTOMS OR OCULAR PAIN – – – – – – – – – – – – – – Hordeolum Chalazion Acute dacryocystitis Exposure to irritants Conjunctival infection Corneal abrasion Foreign-body irritation Corneal ulcers Ingrown lashes Abuse of contact lens Scleritis Acute angle-closure glaucoma Uveitis (iritis) Referred pain from extraocular sources such as sinusitis, tooth abscess, tension headache, temporal arteritis or prodrome of herpes zoster