| Literature DB >> 28790973 |
Daniel Duran1, Robert D Messina2, Lauren A Beslow3,4, Julio D Montejo1,5, Jason K Karimy1, Charuta Gavankar Furey1,5, Alison D Sheridan2, Gordon Sze2, Yanki Yarman1, Michael L DiLuna1,6, Kristopher T Kahle1,6,7.
Abstract
We present two recent cases of toddlers who developed malignant cerebellar edema subsequent to accidental ingestion of prescription opioids. Both children presented acute neurological decline, hydrocephalus, and tonsillar herniation requiring emergent ventricular drain placement, suboccipital craniectomy, and partial cerebellectomy. Together with several other reports, these cases suggest the existence of an uncommon yet severe syndrome of acute opioid-induced malignant cerebellar edema. We hypothesize that the condition results from a combination of primary opioid receptor-mediated changes in neuronal metabolism that are exacerbated by secondary hypoxic insult. If recognized promptly, this syndrome can be treated with emergent neurosurgical intervention with good clinical outcomes. These cases also illustrate the unintended consequences and innocent victims of the spiraling prescription opioid epidemic, which will likely increase in prevalence. Recognition of this syndrome by clinicians is thus critical.Entities:
Keywords: cerebellar edema; opiates; opioid intoxication; pediatric critical care; suboccipital craniectomy
Year: 2017 PMID: 28790973 PMCID: PMC5524743 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2017.00362
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Imaging studies depicting cerebellar edema and restricted water diffusion after accidental opioid overdose in two infants. Panel (A), case 1; panel (B), case 2. Top row: axial computed tomography (CT) images show severe, bilateral cerebellar hypoattenuation, with ventral displacement of the cerebellar vermis and compression of the fourth ventricles. Middle row: coronal CT images demonstrate bilateral cerebellar hypoattenuation and upward displacement of the tectal plate. Bottom row: coronal magnetic resonance diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) depicts bilateral, symmetric cerebellar diffusion restriction [note: DWI images on panel (B) are postoperative].
Reported cases of pediatric opioid-induced malignant cerebellar edema.
| # | Age | Sex | Opiate | Treatment | Neurologic outcome | Country | Year | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 3 years | M | Methadone | Naloxone; EVD; IV methylprednisolone | Intact at 6-weeks follow-up | Portugal | 2006 | Anselmo et al. ( |
| 2 | 22 months | M | Methadone | Naloxone; observation | Death at a few weeks post intoxication | USA | 2008 | Riascos et al. ( |
| 3 | 3 years | F | Methadone | Naloxone; EVD; suboccipital craniectomy | Cognitively intact, mild spasticity, mild cortical visual impairment at 4-month follow-up | England | 2008 | Mills et al. ( |
| 4 | 19 months | F | Fentanyl | Observation | Intact at 3 days post intoxication | USA | 2011 | Foy et al. ( |
| 5 | 3 years | M | Methadone | Observation | Death at 8 h after admission | Portugal | 2012 | Mendes-dos-Santos et al ( |
| 6 | Methadone | EVD | Iran | 2014 | Bazmamoun et al. ( | |||
| 7 | 2 years | F | Morphine | Naloxone; EVD; suboccipital craniectomy | Short sentences, non-ambulatory, light perception in both eyes at 18-month follow-up | USA | 2015 | Reisner et al. ( |
| 8 | 2 years | F | Opium | IV methylprednisolone | Intact at 2-month follow-up | Iran | 2016 | Hosseini and Nikkhah ( |
| 9 | 10 months | F | Oxycodone | Naloxone; EVD; suboccipital craniectomy | Cognitively intact, ambulatory, mild spasticity at 23-month follow-up | USA | 2017 | Duran et al. (this study) |
| 10 | 2 years | M | Morphine | Naloxone; EVD; suboccipital craniectomy | Cognitively intact, ambulatory, mild left lower extremity spasticity at 3-month follow-up | USA | 2017 | Duran et al. (this study) |
Age, sex, opioid consumed, and treatment administered in each reported case of opioid-induced cerebellar edema.
EVD, external ventricular drain, IV, intravenous, USA, United States of America, POD, postoperative day.
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