| Literature DB >> 25922780 |
Sasitorn Siritho1, Wadchara Pumpradit1, Wiboon Suriyajakryuththana1, Krit Pongpirul2.
Abstract
A 43-year-old female presented with severe sharp stabbing right-sided periorbital and retroorbital area headache, dull-aching unilateral jaw pain, eyelid swelling, ptosis, and tearing of the right eye but no rash. The pain episodes lasted five minutes to one hour and occurred 10-15 times per day with unremitting milder pain between the attacks. She later developed an erythematous maculopapular rash over the right forehead and therefore was treated with antivirals. MRI performed one month after the onset revealed small hypersignal-T2 in the right dorsolateral mid-pons and from the right dorsolateral aspect of the pontomedullary region to the right dorsolateral aspect of the upper cervical cord, along the course of the principal sensory nucleus and spinal nucleus of the right trigeminal nerve. No definite contrast enhancement of the right brain stem/upper cervical cord was seen. Orbital imaging showed no abnormality of bilateral optic nerves/chiasm, extraocular muscles, and globes. Slight enhancement of the right V1, V2, and the cisterna right trigeminal nerve was detected. Our findings support the hypothesis of direct involvement by virus theory, reflecting rostral viral transmission along the gasserian ganglion to the trigeminal nuclei at brainstem and caudal spreading along the descending tract of CN V.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25922780 PMCID: PMC4398962 DOI: 10.1155/2015/402015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Radiol ISSN: 2090-6870
Figure 1(a) Coronal and axial MRI sections of the brainstem to spinal cord showed small hypersignal-T2 in the right dorsolateral mid-pons (a1) and from the right dorsolateral aspect of the pontomedullary region (a2) to the right dorsolateral aspect of the upper cervical cord (a3-a4), along the course of the principle sensory nucleus and spinal nucleus of the right trigeminal nerve. Sagittal (b1), coronal (b2), and axial (b3-b4) spinal MRI showed enhancement of the nerve roots along the spinal cord.
Figure 2Axial MRI sections of the brainstem at the pontine level demonstrated fusiform enlargement of the fifth cranial nerve at the cisterna level on the T1-weighted images (a1). Postcontrast, fat-suppressed T1 images showed slight enhancement that is disclosed on cisterna level of the fifth cranial nerve (a2) and enlargement of the maxillary division of the fifth cranial nerve with slight enhancement while it passed foramen rotundum (a3). Also coronal MRI section at the level of the fifth cranial nerve showed slight enhancement (a4). Axial MRI sections showed brain stem at the level of facial and vestibulocochlear nerves in precontrast image (b1) and slight enhancement in postcontrast study (b2).