| Literature DB >> 27878437 |
Richard T Ibitoye1,2, A Wilkins3,4, N J Scolding3,4.
Abstract
Sarcoidosis is a rare but important cause of neurological morbidity, and neurological symptoms often herald the diagnosis. Our understanding of neurosarcoidosis has evolved from early descriptions of a uveoparotid fever to include presentations involving every part of the neural axis. The diagnosis should be suspected in patients with sarcoidosis who develop new neurological symptoms, those presenting with syndromes highly suggestive of neurosarcoidosis, or neuro-inflammatory disease where more common causes have been excluded. Investigation should look for evidence of neuro-inflammation, best achieved by contrast-enhanced brain magnetic resonance imaging and cerebrospinal fluid analysis. Evidence of sarcoidosis outside the nervous system should be sought in search of tissue for biopsy. Skin lesions should be identified and biopsies taken. Chest radiography including high-resolution computed tomography is often informative. In difficult cases, fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography and gallium-67 imaging may identify subclinical disease and a target for biopsy. Symptomatic patients should be treated with corticosteroids, and if clinically indicated other immunosuppressants such as hydroxychloroquine, azathioprine, cyclophosphamide or methotrexate should be added. Anti-tumour necrosis factor alpha therapies may be considered in refractory disease but caution should be exercised as there is evidence to suggest they may unmask disease.Entities:
Keywords: Diagnosis; Management; Neurosarcoidosis; Sarcoidosis; Treatment
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27878437 PMCID: PMC5413520 DOI: 10.1007/s00415-016-8336-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol ISSN: 0340-5354 Impact factor: 4.849
Clinical presentations and their characteristics as reported in NS
| Clinical presentation | Characteristics in NS |
|---|---|
| Aseptic meningitis [ | Mostly this is asymptomatic and inferred from CSF abnormalities. Where patients are symptomatic, the presentation is usually subacute or chronic |
| Typical CSF finds are: pleocytosis (<220 cells/mm3) with a lymphocytic predominance and/or raised protein (<4.3 g/l). Reduced CSF glucose is also reported | |
| Conus or cauda equina syndrome [ | This may be of acute or subacute onset. CSF and imaging abnormalities usually confirm a neuro-inflammatory basis |
| Cranial neuropathy [ | This is the most frequently reported manifestation of NS. Any cranial nerve can be involved but facial and optic nerves are most frequently affected |
| Facial nerve palsies often spontaneously remit and carry a good prognosis | |
| Cranial oligoneuropathy or polyneuropathy (e.g. bilateral facial nerve palsy) is suggestive of NS | |
| Optic nerve involvement may have a more difficult disease course with refractory disease and relapse on corticosteroid dose reduction | |
| A pharynx, soft palate and vocal cord syndrome from glossopharyngeal and vagus nerve involvement is recognised | |
| Basal meningitis may be the pathophysiological substrate of cranial neuropathies | |
| Focal neurology, multifocal neurology or diffuse encephalopathy due to parenchymal lesions of the brain or brainstem [ | Lesions may be multiple and often enhance. Biopsy of mass lesions is recommended for a definitive diagnosis |
| Behaviour change, confusional states and psychosis are reported | |
| Hypothamic and pituitary dysfunction [ | Usually of insidious onset, due to suprasellar inflammatory lesions. The most eminent symptoms are bitemporal visual failure, polydipsia and polyuria (diabetes insipidus), and galactorrhoea |
| Symptoms may arise from hypothalamic dysfunction, hypopituitarism or compression of the optic chiasm by mass effect | |
| An aseptic meningitis is often seen | |
| Myopathy [ | Usually asymptomatic. Where symptomatic, this presents as proximal weakness. Biopsy is reported to have a high diagnostic yield |
| Peripheral polyneuropathy [ | Pure sensory and mixed neuropathies are reported. Mononeuritis multiplex is also described |
| Raised intracranial pressure [ | Patients usually present non-specifically with a headache and visual disturbance. Clinical signs may include papilloedema |
| CSF and imaging show evidence of active inflammation, including meningeal enhancement and ventriculitis | |
| Hydrocephalus may develop and may require surgical management | |
| Seizures [ | Can be a feature of cortical or subcortical disease |
| Spinal cord syndromes and radiculitis [ | Mass lesions and inflammatory lesions are reported. A Guillain–Barré-like syndrome is occasionally described |
| In longitudinally extensive myelitis where aquaporin antibodies are negative, NS should be considered | |
| Uveoparotid fever [ | Uveitis, parotid gland swelling, fever and facial nerve palsy constitute this syndrome which is pathognomonic of sarcoidosis |
| CSF often shows evidence of an aseptic meningitis | |
| Vascular syndromes [ | Ischaemic stroke, haemorrhagic stroke and dural venous sinus thrombosis are infrequently reported |
| Perivascular inflammation has been demonstrated in biopsy and post-mortem specimen |