ACUTE ZOSTER ENCEPHALOMYELITIS IN A CASE OF PANCREATIC HEAD NEOPLASM WITH FULMINANT PROGRESSION: CASE PRESENTATION

Encephalitis is a rare complication of cervical - cranial zoster infection. Myelitis is a similar, severe complication of thoracic zoster. They occur in patients with immune deficiencies, in 5-21 days after the rash and progress in the same time frame. We are presenting the case of a 54 year old ma...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Anca Hancu, Andreea Iliesiu, Gabriela Butoi, Cristina Beiu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Amaltea Medical Publishing House 2013-09-01
Series:Romanian Journal of Neurology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistemedicale.amaltea.ro/Romanian_Journal_of_NEUROLOGY/Revista_Romana_de_NEUROLOGIE-2013-Nr.3/RJN_2013_3_Art-06.pdf
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Summary:Encephalitis is a rare complication of cervical - cranial zoster infection. Myelitis is a similar, severe complication of thoracic zoster. They occur in patients with immune deficiencies, in 5-21 days after the rash and progress in the same time frame. We are presenting the case of a 54 year old male with rapid evolution of an ascending encephalomyelitis with onset at 17 days after a left cervical-thoraco-brachial zoster episode. Neurologic examination: lower limb paresthesia, ascending to the trunk, unstable gait, which becomes impossible with closed eyes, absent deep tendon reflexes, bilateral Babinski sign. After 48 hours, left cerebellar syndrome appears, in one week the patient had asymmetrical tetraparesis and in 11 days he becomes paraplegic, left side more affected than the right one. After 16 days, the clinical state stabilizes, he begins moving his right lower limb. Lumbar puncture on admission: CSF albumin 1220 mg% (after 3 days it becomes normal); 81 cells/mm3, 100% mononuclear cells, 50 cells after 3 days and after a week 23 cells/mm3. Cervical and thoracic spine MRI performed on the 3rd day from admission was normal but after repeating it in 10 days it showed T2, STIR and FLAIR hyper intense intraspinal, infra- and supratentorial lesions, well contoured, with homogenous gadolinium enhancement: demielinating lesions. He received Aciclovir, Solumedrol, Insulin and symptomatic treatment. After 2 weeks from leaving the hospital with symptomatic treatment and kinetic therapy, he returns in a septic state, with deep bed sores, positive blood cultures (Fusobacterium nucleatum, Staphylococcus Epidermidis) and urine cultures (Klebsiella). The outcome was death in 4 days. Differential diagnosis – polyradiculoneuritis, paraneoplastic syndrome, cerebral and vertebral metastases. Pathology exams: low grade acinary adenocarcinoma of the pancreatic head, invasive, with a solid pattern. The particularity of the case: the severity of the acute ascending encephalomyelitis, the fulminant evolution of the pancreatic cancer, the disruption of the blood-brain barrier by an inflammatory and tumoral mechanism, showed on spine and brain contrast MRI.
ISSN:1843-8148
2069-6094