| Literature DB >> 27621721 |
Ali Al Balushi1, Marshall W Meeks1, Ghazala Hayat1, Jafar Kafaie1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) is a rare, rapidly progressive neurodegenerative disease that almost always results in death in under a year from onset of symptoms. Here, we report four cases of CJD with different clinical presentations diagnosed at our institution over a 2-year period. CASES: The first patient is an 82-year-old woman who presented with depression, cognitive decline, and word-finding difficulty over 4 weeks. The patient deteriorated neurologically to akinetic mutism and death within 6 weeks of presentation. The second patient is a 54-year-old woman with liver cirrhosis who presented with confusion, ataxia, and multiple falls over 4 weeks. She was treated initially for hepatic encephalopathy but continued to progress to mutism, startle myoclonus, and obtundation. Death occurred within 4 weeks of presentation. The third patient is a 58-year-old woman who presented with an 8-week history of confusion, urinary incontinence, Parkinsonism, ataxia, and myoclonus. Death occurred within 2 months from presentation. The fourth patient is a 67-year-old man who presented with a 6-week history of headache, blurred vision, ataxia, and personality change and progressed to confusion, myoclonus, akinetic mutism, and obtundation. Death occurred within 3 weeks from presentation.Entities:
Keywords: Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease; dementia; neuropathology; prion protein; spongiform encephalopathy
Year: 2016 PMID: 27621721 PMCID: PMC5002415 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2016.00138
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Patient characteristics.
| Age/sex | Clinical presentation | Initial diagnosis | Time from onset to diagnosis | MRI findings | EEG findings | CSF 14-3-3 | Autopsy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 82/F | Memory impairment, aphasia, and depression | Alzheimer’s dementia | 7 weeks | Small vessel disease | Generalized slowing | Positive | Positive |
| 54/F | Confusion, ataxia, and falls | Hepatic encephalopathy | 6 weeks | DWI and FLAIR basal ganglia hyperintensity | Periodic sharp wave complexes | Positive | Positive |
| 58/F | Confusion, myoclonus, urinary incontinence, ataxia, and Parkinsonism | CJD | 10 weeks | DWI and FLAIR hyperintensity in basal ganglia and pulvinar nuclei of the thalami | Periodic sharp wave complexes | Positive | Not done |
| 67/M | Headache, blurred vision, ataxia, personality change, confusion, and myoclonus | Subacute encephalitis | 9 weeks | DWI and FLAIR hyperintensity in basal ganglia and left frontal cortex | Periodic sharp wave complexes and slow background | Positive | Positive |
Figure 1EEG of patient 2 with periodic sharp wave complexes circled.
Figure 2MRI brain (1. DWI, 2. FLAIR sequence) of patient 3 that demonstrates basal ganglia hyperintense signal.
MRI-CJD consortium criteria for sporadic Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease.
Dementia Cerebellar or visual Pyramidal or extrapyramidal Akientic mutism |
Periodic sharp wave complexes in EEG Protein 14-3-3 detection in CSF (in patients with disease duration of less than 2 years) High signal abnormalities in caudate nucleus and putamen or at least two cortical regions (temporal–parietal–occipital) either on DWI or FLAIR sequences |
Probable CJD: two out of I and at least one out of II.
Possible CJD: two out of I and duration less than 2 years.