| Literature DB >> 21676235 |
Florence Fenollar1, François Nicoli, Claire Paquet, Hubert Lepidi, Patrick Cozzone, Jean-Christophe Antoine, Jean Pouget, Didier Raoult.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Tropheryma whipplei, the agent of Whipple's disease, causes localised infections in the absence of histological digestive involvement. Our objective is to describe T. whipplei encephalitis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21676235 PMCID: PMC3141410 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-11-171
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Summary of 14 brain biopsies from patients with encephalitis analysed in our laboratory using PAS staining, immunohistochemistry with polyclonal rabbit antibodies specifically directed against T. whipplei and specific PCR
| Brain biopsies | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| *1 | F/67 | Ireland | Positive | Negative | Negative |
| *2 | M/25 | Canada | Positive | Negative | Negative |
| *3 | M/42 | France | Positive | Negative | Negative |
| *4 | M/37 | Belgium | Positive | Negative | Negative |
| *5 | NA/NA | Japan | Positive | Negative | Negative |
| *6 | M/34 | France | Positive | Negative | Negative |
| *7 | M/64 | France | Positive | Negative | Negative |
| *8 | M/66 | France | Positive | Negative | Negative |
| *9 | M/73 | Japan | Positive | Negative | NA 1 |
| *10 | M/14 | USA | Positive | Negative | NA 1 |
| *11 | NA/NA | South-Africa | Positive | Negative | NA 1 |
| *12 | M/NA | Canada | Positive | Negative | NA 1 |
| *2Patient 1 in this study | M/39 | France | Negative | Negative | Positive |
| *2Patient 5 in this study | F/33 | France | Negative | Negative | Positive |
NA: Not available
*: All samples from these patients were analysed in our facilities.
1: PCR assays were not available for these patients because no fresh specimens were sampled and the quality of the DNA extracted from the paraffin-embedded specimens was poor, not allowing a conclusive diagnosis.
2: Patients were seen and followed by one of the authors (DR) in consultation.
Figure 1Figure 1a and 1b. Magnetic resonance examinations of Patient 1. MR examinations were performed on a 1.5 T Magnetom Vision Plus system (Siemens, Erlangen, Germany). The imaging protocol included one axial and coronal T2-weighted sequence and one axial T1-weighted sequence, performed before and after contrast agent administration not at diagnosis but before treatment, after 18 months of treatment, at relapse, and after 17 months of a new treatment. A multimodal MRI of Patient 1 at the time of the diagnosis disclosed multiple brain lesions located in the medulla oblongata, the hypothalamus, the internal side of the right temporal lobe, the bilateral fornix, the lenticular nuclei and the head of caudate nuclei. These nonspecific, but unusual, lesions have a high signal intensity on FLAIR images and low signal intensity on MT images. They are slightly enhanced on T1-weighted images after gadolinium administration. Complete normalisation of the FLAIR abnormalities after 18 months of treatment were observed. A new lesion appeared in the left medulla oblongata during the relapse; it was enhanced after gadolinium injection. FLAIR abnormalities reappeared during the relapse, and lenticulocaudate gadolinium enhancement was also observed. A complete disappearance of the lesions after 17 months of treatment and the complete disappearance of gadolinium enhancement were also observed, in accordance with clinical improvement.
Features of patients with Whipple's disease [1], patients with Whipple's disease with neurological manifestations and patients with T. whipplei chronic encephalitis
| Feature | Patients with Whipple's disease | Patients with Whipple's disease and neurological manifestations | Patients with certain | Patients with possible | Patients with certain or possible |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male sex | 770/886 (87) | 57/74 (77) | 8/13 (61.5) | 4/7 (57) | 12/20 (60) |
| Age | NA | 50 ± 13 | 50 ± 13 | 52 ± 12 | 51 ± 12 |
| Arthralgia or arthritis | 244/335 (73) | 49/74 (66) | 1/11 (9) | 3/7 (43) | 4/18 (22) |
| Chronic diarrhoea | 272/335 (81) | 30/74 (40.5) | 0/12 | 0/6 | 0/18 |
| Weight loss | 223/240 (93) | 35/57 (47) | 1/11 (9) | 0/6 | 1/17 (6) |
NA: Not available
Clinical features* of 74 patients with Whipple's disease (i.e., patients with histological digestive involvement characterised by positive PAS staining) with neurologic manifestations and those with certain (13) and possible (7) T. whipplei chronic encephalitis without digestive lesions
| Neurologic manifestations | Whipple's disease with neurologic manifestations | Certain | Possible | Certain and possible |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of patients | 74 | 13 | 7 | 20 |
| Cognitive impairment | 53 (72%) | 9 (69%) | 7 (100%) | 16 (80%) |
| 12 (16%) | ||||
| Supranuclear ophthalmoplegia | 29 (39%) | 5 (38%) | 4 (57%) | 9 (45%) |
| Hypothalamic manifestations | 24 (32%) | 4 (31%) | 2 (29%) | 6 (30%) |
| 9 (12%) | 4 (31%) | 3 (43%) | ||
| 4 (5.5%) | ||||
| 10 (13.5%) | 4 (31%) | 3 (43%) | ||
| Oculomasticatory myorhythmia | 7 (5.5%) | 2 (17%) | 2 (29%) | 4 (20%) |
| Upper motor neuron disorder | 11 (15%) | 4 (31%) | 3 (43%) | 7 (35%) |
| Decreasing level of consciousness | 25 (35%) | 2 (15%) | 6 (75%; p = 0.01) | 8 (40%) |
| Myoclonus | 29 (39%) | 3 (23%) | 1 (14%) | 4 (20%) |
| Depression | 11 (15%) | 3 (23%) | 1 (14%) | 3 (15%) |
| Personality changes | 22 (30%) | 2 (15%) | 2 (29%) | 4 (20%) |
| Headache | 10 (13.5%) | 1 (8%) | 2 (29%) | 3 (15%) |
| Apathy | 15 (20%) | 1 (8%) | 1 (14%) | 2 (10%) |
| Muscle weakness | 14 (19%) | 2 (15%) | 2 (29%) | 4 (20%) |
| Seizures | 13 (18%) | 3 (23%) | 1 (14%) | 4 (20%) |
| Nystagmus | 11 (15%) | 3 (23%) | 1 (14%) | 4 (20%) |
| Extrapyramidal movement disorder | 8 (11%) | 2 (17%) | 2 (29%) | 4 (20%) |
Significant p values are noted in bold.
* Neurological signs were defined as follows: "Decreasing level of consciousness" included somnolence, lethargy, and coma. "Cognitive impairment" included abnormalities of orientation, memory, or reasoning. "Hypothalamic manifestations" included polydipsia, hyperphagia, sexual impotence, changes in the sleep-wake cycle and insomnia, but not isolated somnolence. Oculomasticatory myorhythmia was defined as pendular vergence oscillations of the eyes that were synchronous with masticatory myorhythmia. Both were classified as myorhythmia. "Myoclonus", which is nonrhythmic, was distinguished from myorhythmia. "Cerebellar forms" were considered when a patient presented dysarthria and ataxia.