| Literature DB >> 29703169 |
Germaine Eleanor Torres Herrán1, Andrés Damián Ortega Heredia1, Braulio Martinez Burbano1, Marcos Serrano-Dueñas2, María Angélica Ortiz Yepez1, Raúl Alberto Barrera Madera1, Luis Alfredo Masabanda Campaña1,3, Guillermo David Baño Jiménez1,3, Denny Maritza Santos Saltos1,3, Edgar Patricio Correa Díaz4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease is a rare and fatal neurodegenerative disorder that affects mammals and humans. The prevalence of this disease in the United States is 0.5 to 1 per million inhabitants. So far in Ecuador, we do not know what the prevalence or incidence is, and only one case report has been written. CASEEntities:
Keywords: 14–3-3 protein; Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease; Prion protein; RT-QuIC; Rapidly progressive dementia; Tau protein
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29703169 PMCID: PMC5921541 DOI: 10.1186/s12883-018-1061-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Fig. 1Pathologic features of prion disease in case 1. Hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining demonstrates typical spongiform degeneration (vacuolation) of the gray matter neuropil characteristic of Jakob-Creutzfeldt disease
Fig. 2Imaging of the patient in case 2 3 months after onset of sporadic Jakob-Creutzfeldt disease. a-e, Axial diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI). Bilateral restricted diffusion cortical ribboning is shown in the bilateral temporal and parietal cortices (white arrows). f, fluid attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) shows high signal abnormalities in caudate and putamen nucleus (black arrows)
Fig. 3Electroencephalography of the patient in case 2 at months 3. Legend: periodic sharp wave complexes at intervals of 1 to 2 s
Patient characteristics
| Age/Sex | Clinical presentation | Duration of the disease (months) | Triphasic waves in EEG | MRI findings | CSF 14–3-3 | Tau protein | Autopsy | Age of death (years) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 48/M | Confusion, ataxia, generalized chorea, myoclonus, blurred vision | 16 | Present | Hyperintensity in basal ganglia | Positive | 2130 pg/ml | Positive | 49 |
| 74/F | Confusion, ataxia, myoclonus, urinary incontinence and psychomotor agitation | 10 | Present | Hyperintensity in basal ganglia and cortical ribboning | Positive | 3967 pg/ml | Not done | 74 |
| 54/M | Ataxia, confusion, myoclonus and memory impairment | 12 | Present | Hyperintensity in basal ganglia | Positive | 1788 pg/ml | Not done | 55 |
| 57/M | Blurred vision, vertigo, ataxia and confusion | 14 | Present | Hyperintensity in basal ganglia and cortical ribboning | Positive | 2976 pg/ml | Not done | 58 |
| 64/F | Headache, vertigo, confusion, memory impairment and urinary incontinence | 14 | Present | Hyperintensity in basal ganglia and cortical ribboning | Positive | 13,357 pg/ml | Not done | 65 |
| 56/F | Vertigo, ataxia, insomnia, confusion | 12 | Present | Hyperintensity in basal ganglia and cortical ribboning | Positive | 11,770 pg/ml | Not done | 56 |
EEG electroencephalogram, MRI magnetic resonance imaging, CSF cerebrospinal fluid
WHO 1998 criteria for diagnosis of sCJD
| Diagnostic Certainty | Characteristic |
|---|---|
| Definite | Diagnosed standard neuropathological techniques; and/or immunocytochemically |
| Probable | Progressive dementia |
| and at least two out of the following four clinical features | |
| Myoclonus | |
| Visual/cerebellar dysfunction | |
| Pyramidal/Extrapyramidal symtoms | |
| Akinetic mutism | |
| And | |
| Positive EEG | |
| Or | |
| Positive 14–3-3 | |
| Possible | Progressive dementia |
| None of 14–3-3 protein and EEG | |
| and at least two out of the following four clinical features | |
| Myoclonus | |
| Visual/cerebellar dysfunction | |
| Pyramidal/Extrapyramidal symtoms | |
| Akinetic mutism | |
| And | |
| Duration less than 2 years |
EEG: electroencephalogram
The University of Edinburgh 2017 criteria for diagnosis of sCJD
| Diagnostic Certainty | Characteristic |
|---|---|
| Definite | Progressive neurological syndrome AND Neuropathologically or immunocytochemically or biochemically confirmed |
| Probable | Rapidly progressive cognitive impairment |
| Two or more of A – B – C – D | |
| And | |
| Typical EEG (Generalised periodic complexes) | |
| OR | Rapidly progressive cognitive impairment |
| Two or more of A – B – C – D | |
| And | |
| Typical MRI brain scan (High signal in caudate/putamen on MRI brain scan or at least two cortical regions temporal, parietal, occipital, either on DWI or FLAIR | |
| OR | Rapidly progressive cognitive impairment |
| Two or more of A – B – C – D | |
| And | |
| Positive 14–3-3 | |
| OR | elaProgressive neurological syndrome and positive RT-QuIC in CSF or other tissues |
| Possible | Rapidly progressive cognitive impairment |
| two or more of A – B – C – D | |
| And duration < 2 years |
Clinical Criteria
A. Myoclonus
B. Visual or cerebellar problems
C. Pyramidal or extrapyramidal features
D kinetic mutism
EEG electroencephalogram, MRI magnetic resonance imaging, DWI diffusion-weighted imaging, FLAIR fluid attenuated inversion recovery, RT-QuIc positive real-time quaking-induced conversión, CSF cerebrospinal fluid