| Literature DB >> 21468361 |
Tiina Sairanen1, Mari Kanerva, Leena Valanne, Jukka Lyytinen, Eero Pekkonen.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We present here a case of haemorrhagic brain infarction in a middle-aged and physically active male, who had never smoked. This case report aims to remind the internist and neurologist to bear in mind unusual aetiologies of brain infarcts in patients without classical cardiovascular risk factors. CASE DESCRIPTION: A 49-year-old male with pulmonary asthma and a prior history of nasal polyps had a wake-up stroke with left-sided symptoms and speech disturbance. A head MRI and MR angiography revealed a recent haemorrhagic infarct in the right putamen and corona radiata. The left hemiparesis progressed to sensory-motor hemiplegia on the 4th day. In the head CT, it was shown that the haemorrhagic infarct had progressed to a large haematoma. A pansinusitis was also diagnosed. The aetiological investigations revealed a minor atrial septal defect (ASD) with shunting and a heterozygotic clotting factor V R506Q mutation. A remarkable blood eosinophilia of 9.80 E9/l (42%) together with fever, sinusitis, wide-spread bilateral nodular pulmonary infiltrates that did not respond to wide-spectrum antimicrobial treatment, positive anti-neutrophilic cytoplasmic antibodies, a high myeloperoxidase antibody level and slightly positive anti-proteinase 3 antibodies suggested the diagnosis of Churg-Strauss syndrome. These inflammatory symptoms and findings promptly responded to treatment with corticosteroids and cyclophosphamide.Entities:
Keywords: Atrial septal defect; Churg-Strauss syndrome; Eosinophilia; Factor V Leiden; Haemorrhagic stroke; Patent foramen ovale; Small vessel vasculitis; mutation
Year: 2011 PMID: 21468361 PMCID: PMC3064863 DOI: 10.1159/000323214
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Neurol ISSN: 1662-680X
Fig. 1Head MRI on admission (a–c) and control head CT scan after symptom progression on day 4 (d). a An axial FLAIR image showing an acute infarct in the right putamen (arrow). b A diffusion-weighted image demonstrating restricted diffusion of the lesion, consistent with an infarct. c A small haemorrhage (black dot) is noted within the infarcted area in a T2∗-weighted image. d Progression of the haemorrhagic transformation in the putamen on day 4 in CT.
Fig. 2Blood eosinophil count (E9/l) and CRP level (mg/l) in relation to the treatments.
The autoantibodies at the time of diagnosis of Churg-Strauss syndrome and after high-dose IV steroid treatment
| Antoantibodies | Value at 1 week | Reference | Value at 1 month |
|---|---|---|---|
| S-ANCA | |||
| S-Pr3AbG | 9.9 IU/ml | <4 | <2 IU/ml |
| S-MPOAbG | 63.4 IU/ml | <6 | <2 IU/ml |
| S-C-ANCIF | <20 titer | <20 | <20 titer |
| S-P-ANCIF | 200 titer | <20 | <20 titer |
| S-ANAAb | 80 | <80 | <80 |