| Literature DB >> 29895322 |
Abdelhafid Houba1, Nisrine Laaribi2, Mohammed Meziane3, Abdelhamid Jaafari3, Khalil Abouelalaa3, Mustapha Bensghir3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A stroke in a baby is uncommon, recent studies suggested that their incidence is rising. Moyamoya disease is one of the leading causes of stroke in babies. This condition is mostly described in Japan. In Morocco, moyamoya disease has rarely been reported and a few cases were published. We report a rare Moroccan case of a 23-month-old baby boy who presented with left-sided hemiparesis and was diagnosed as having moyamoya disease. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Acute stroke; Cerebral angiography; Infant; Moyamoya disease
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29895322 PMCID: PMC5998455 DOI: 10.1186/s13256-018-1642-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Case Rep ISSN: 1752-1947
Fig. 1Brain computed tomography showing, at day 3 of deficit, a low density area in the right cortical and subcortical frontotemporoparietal regions and right insular cortex representing ischemic infarcts in the territory of the right middle cerebral artery (a). Evolution of previous ischemic lesion at day 9 of deficit (b)
Fig. 2Cerebral angiography at the level of the circle of Willis showed a proximal obliteration (arrows) in the right middle cerebral artery with a fine anastomotic Moyamoya network and typical “puff of smoke” appearance
Causes for pediatric acute ischemic stroke classified in major categories
| Arteriopathies | Arterial fibromuscular dysplasia, arteriovenous malformation, arterial dissection, moyamoya disease, transient cerebral arteriopathy of childhood, primary central nervous system vasculitis, cranial radiotherapy |
| Vasculitis | Meningitis, postinfectious systemic lupus erythematosus, polyarteritis nodosa, granulomatous angiitis, Takayasu’s arteritis, rheumatoid arthritis, dermatomyositis, inflammatory bowel disease, hemolytic uremic syndrome |
| Hematologic disorders and coagulopathies | Hemoglobinopathies (sickle cell anemia, sickle cell–hemoglobin C, sickle-thalassemia), purpura, thrombocytosis, polycythemia, disseminated intravascular coagulation, leukemia or other neoplasms, congenital coagulation defects, lupus anticoagulant, anticardiolipin antibodies |
| Metabolic disorders | Mitochondrial disorders (MELAS syndrome), urea metabolic disorders, homocystinuria, aminoaciduria, glutaric acidemia type I, lysosomal disorders, Fabry’s disease |
| Heart diseases | Congenital malformations: ventricular/atrial septal defect, patent ductus arteriosus, aortic/mitral stenosis, coarctation, complex congenital heart defects |
| Traumatic | Child abuse, post-traumatic arterial dissection, blunt cervical arterial trauma, post-traumatic carotid cavernous fistula, penetrating intracranial trauma |
By Rosa et al. [29] (licensed under a CCBY4.0 licence: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
MELAS mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episodes
Conditions reported in association with moyamoya syndrome
| More common | Less common |
|---|---|
| Neurofibromatosis type I | Structural cardiac anomalies |
| Sickle cell disease | PHACES syndrome |
| Down syndrome (trisomy 21) | Congenital dwarfing syndromes |
| Post-cranial radiation | Alagille syndrome |
Permission was granted by Kirkham and deBaun (© Current Science Inc. [30]) to reuse this table
PHACES posterior fossa malformations–hemangiomas–arterial anomalies–cardiac defects–eye abnormalities–sternal cleft and supraumbilical raphe syndrome