Literature DB >> 18477991

A case of enteroviral meningoencephalitis presenting as rapidly progressive dementia.

Victor Valcour1, Aissa Haman, Susannah Cornes, Carson Lawall, Andrew T Parsa, Carol Glaser, Shigeo Yagi, Tarik Tihan, Julu Bhatnagar, Michael Geschwind.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: A 70-year-old immunocompetent male presented to a memory disorders clinic with a 7-month illness that had begun with somatic complaints including transient right temporal head pain, left buttock pain, and right conjunctival injection. About 3 months after the first signs of illness, the patient had begun to develop insidious cognitive and behavioral decline, which progressed most rapidly in the 2 months before presentation. An assessment completed during hospitalization for intermittent fevers and confusion had not revealed an infectious etiology, although mild pleocytosis in the cerebrospinal fluid had been noted. Upon presentation to the memory disorders clinic, the patient was disoriented, distractible, laughed at inappropriate moments, and followed only one-step commands. He had hypophonic speech and had mildly increased axial tone. He scored 5 out of 30 on the Mini Mental State Examination and was admitted for expedited evaluation. INVESTIGATIONS: Physical examination, brain MRI, electroencephalogram, lumbar puncture, autoimmune and paraneoplastic testing, cerebral angiogram, cerebrospinal fluid analysis, enterovirus group-specific reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction assay, and RNA sequencing in brain biopsy samples. DIAGNOSIS: Enteroviral meningoencephalitis. MANAGEMENT: Intravenous steroids with oral taper and intravenous immunoglobulin.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18477991      PMCID: PMC2637149          DOI: 10.1038/ncpneuro0804

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nat Clin Pract Neurol        ISSN: 1745-834X


  15 in total

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