| Literature DB >> 30788708 |
Adam S Jasne1, Khalid H Alsherbini2, Matthew S Smith3, Abhi Pandhi2, Achala Vagal3, Daniel Kanter3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Abnormal restricted diffusion on magnetic resonance imaging is often associated with ischemic stroke or anoxic injury, but other conditions can present similarly. We present six cases of an unusual but consistent pattern of restricted diffusion in bilateral hippocampi and cerebellar cortices. This pattern of injury is distinct from typical imaging findings in ischemic, anoxic, or toxic injury, suggesting it may represent an under-recognized clinicoradiographic syndrome. Despite initial presentation with stupor or coma in the context of obstructive hydrocephalus, patients may have acceptable outcomes if offered early intervention.Entities:
Keywords: Acute brain injuries; Cerebellar syndromes; Cerebral edema; Drug overdose; Hippocampus proper
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30788708 PMCID: PMC6757017 DOI: 10.1007/s12028-018-00666-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurocrit Care ISSN: 1541-6933 Impact factor: 3.210
Patient characteristics and outcomes
| Patient 1: 54F | Patient 2: 59M | Patient 3: 49F | Patient 4: 50M | Patient 5: 35M | Patient 6: 33M | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acute exposure | Hydromorphone | BZD, cocaine, opiates | Heroin | Cocaine, fentanyl | Amphetamines, etOH | Cocaine, BZD, etOH |
| Clinical presentation | Unresponsive, apneic | Unresponsive, hypoxic, extensor posturing | Found unresponsive, cyanotic | Found unresponsive; last well 2 days prior | Encephalopathy, decreased activity | Found unresponsive |
| Initial GCS | 3 | 5 | 7 | 3 | 11 | 3 |
| Hospital interventions | MV, HTS, EVD, SubOcc | MV, HTS, EVD, SubOcc | MV, HTS, EVD, SubOcc | MV, HTS, EVD; had preexisting SubOcc | HTS | MV, HTS |
| Disposition | Trach/PEG, acute rehabilitation | In-hospital death | PEG, shelter home | SNF | Acute rehabilitation | Home with supervision |
| Follow-up | 2 months: moderate cognitive impairment; mild–moderate weakness, wheelchair-bound | n/a | 1 month: mild dysarthria only | 6 months: cognitive and memory deficits; living at nursing home | 3 months: abulia, memory and cognitive issues, mild hemiparesis; living with family | 2 years: end-stage renal disease; living alone with home health |
BZD benzodiazepines, etOH ethanol, EVD extraventricular drain, F female, GCS Glasgow Coma Scale, HTS hypertonic saline, M male, MV mechanical ventilation, PEG percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy, SNF skilled nursing facility, SubOcc suboccipital decompression, Trach tracheostomy
Fig. 1Non-contrast computed tomography of the head from patients at the time of arrival or transfer to tertiary care center, at the level of the cerebellum (above) and the lateral ventricles (below). A Patient #1, CT on arrival to tertiary care center, 3 days after initial event; emergent suboccipital decompression was completed on arrival; B Patient #2, at time of presentation, ~ 48 h after last well; C1 Patient #3, on arrival; C2 Patient #3 on hospital day 6, demonstrating evolution of cerebellar edema with obstructive hydrocephalus; D Patient #4, at time of presentation, ~ 24 h from last well; E Patient #5, at time of presentation, ~ 24 h from last well; F1 Patient #4, at time of presentation, ~ 48 h from last well; suboccipital decompression is from a previous event; F2 Patient #4 on hospital day 4, demonstrating evolution of cerebellar edema with obstructive hydrocephalus
Fig. 2Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging by patient and brain region demonstrating cytotoxic edema in the cerebellar cortices, hippocampi, and basal ganglia of patients #1 (b), #2 (a), #4 (c), and #5 (d). MRI of patients #3 and #6 (not pictured) showed similar patterns
Fig. 3Patient #5 MRI brain, selected sequences, initial and three-month follow-up. DWI diffusion-weighted imaging, FLAIR fluid-attenuation inversion recovery, MRI magnetic resonance imaging. Evolution of imaging changes between initial presentation and repeat imaging 3 months later. Abnormal restricted diffusion was not present on follow-up imaging (not shown)
Distinctive features of CHANTER syndrome, selected differential diagnoses, and similar cases
| Etiology | Clinical presentation | Injury/imaging pattern | Other notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| CHANTER | Acute ↓LOC | Bilateral cbel + hippocampi +/− BN | Risk of obstructive HCP |
| Acute ischemic stroke | Focal neurologic deficits | DWI+ in a vascular distribution | +/− Evidence of vascular occlusion |
| HASL (“chasing the dragon”) [ | Strength or movement abnormalities, ataxia; frequently subacute | Predominantly white matter; unlikely DWI+ | |
| PRES [ | Variable; +/− headache, vision changes, AMS, seizure | Predominantly white matter | Specific provoking factors |
| Anoxic injury [ | ↓LOC | Cerebral cortex +/− cbel, hippocampi, BN | Not typically associated with obstructive HCP |
| Carbon monoxide (CO) [ | Headache, AMS | Globus pallidus + BN > cbel + brainstem | Clinical exposure |
| Cyanide (CN) [ | Headache, agitation, seizures | BN +/− hippocampi; cbel spared | Clinical exposure |
| Mercury (Hg) [ | Acute: systemic symptoms; chronic: personality changes, erethism | Punctate lesions or degeneration without acute edema or DWI+ | Clinical exposure |
| Small/Barash et al. [ | Memory impairment | Hippocampal DWI+ | |
| Bhattacharyya et al. [ | Various | Hippocampal and other DWI+ areas | |
| Pediatric opiate overdoses [ | ↓LOC | +/− Cerebellar edema | Limited examples with MRI to show potential other areas of injury |
AMS altered mental status, BN basal nuclei, cbel cerebellum, CHANTER Cerebellar Hippocampal And basal Nuclei Transient Edema with Restricted diffusion, DWI+ hyperintensity on diffusion-weighted imaging, HASL heroin-associated spongiform leukoencephalopathy, HCP hydrocephalus, LOC level of consciousness, PRES posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome, +/− with or without, > more frequently than