| Literature DB >> 28168232 |
Ju Young Choi1, Joon Min Park1, Kyung Hwan Kim1, Jun Seok Park1, Dong Wun Shin1, Hoon Kim1, Woo Chan Jeon1, Hyun Jong Kim1.
Abstract
A 77-year-old woman was admitted to a local clinic for altered consciousness and presented with a suspected basal ganglion hemorrhage detected on brain computed tomography. The patient was stuporous, but her vital signs were stable. Her initial blood glucose was 607 mg/dL, and a hyperdense lesion was found in the right basal ganglion on brain computed tomography. T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging revealed high signal intensity in the right basal ganglion. Electroencephalography showed no seizure activity. The patient was treated with a fluid infusion, and serum glucose level was controlled with insulin. The patient gradually recovered consciousness and was alert within 24 hours as serum glucose level normalized. The basal ganglion lesion caused by hyperglycemia was not accompanied by involuntary limb movement. This is the first report of a patient presenting with decreased consciousness and typical neural radiographic changes associated with nonketotic hyperglycemia but without movement abnormalities.Entities:
Keywords: Basal ganglia; Hyperglycemia; Magnetic resonance imaging; Tomography, X-ray computed
Year: 2016 PMID: 28168232 PMCID: PMC5292295 DOI: 10.15441/ceem.15.035
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Exp Emerg Med ISSN: 2383-4625
Fig. 1.Axial (A) and coronal (B) brain computed tomography. The right basal ganglion shows a hyperdense lesion. The internal capsule had normal density. No mass effect was observed.
Fig. 2.Brain magnetic resonance imaging shows high signal intensity on a T1-weighted image (A), low signal intensity on a diffusion-weighted image (B), and low signal intensity on the apparent diffusion coefficient map (C). No mass effect was observed.