| Literature DB >> 32026006 |
Rie Ishikawa1, Yuhei Ishikawa2, Takeshi Kubota2, Kumi Shirahama3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Corticosteroid therapy is useful for the resolution of pain and paresis in Tolosa-Hunt syndrome; however, there is no definitive protocol for appropriate dosing, route of administration, or duration of therapy. Steroid psychosis is an adverse reaction to corticosteroid therapy; in severe cases, it can develop into psychiatric disorders such as delirium, depression, and mania. In this case study, we report a patient with Tolosa-Hunt syndrome who developed delirium while receiving corticosteroid therapy. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Corticosteroid; Delirium; Steroid psychosis; Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
Year: 2018 PMID: 32026006 PMCID: PMC6967251 DOI: 10.1186/s40981-018-0193-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JA Clin Rep ISSN: 2363-9024
Fig. 1Neuro-ophthalmologic examination before treatment initiation shows right palpebral ptosis and paresis of the third right canal nerve
Fig. 2a Coronal T1 scan of brain MRI with gadolinium. b Axial T1 scan of orbital MRI with gadolinium. Both images show the lesion expanding from the right cavernous sinus to the orbital apex (arrows)
Case reports involving patients who were given corticosteroid therapy
| Author (year) | Steroid | Initial dose | Dosing period | Route of initial administration | Tapering period |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mombaerts I (1996) [ | Corticosteroid | 60 mg/day | 2 weeks | PO | Several months |
| Cakirer S (2003) [ | Prednisolone | 80 mg/day | 2 weeks | IV | 6 weeks |
| Colnaghi S (2006) [ | Prednisolone | 75 mg/day | 4 months | – | – |
| Curone M (2009) [ | Prednisolone | 1–1.5 mg/kg/day | – | PO | 5–6 weeks |
| Schuknecht B (2009) [ | Prednisolone | 1–1.5 mg/kg/day | – | PO | – Reduced based on clinical response |
| İlgen Uslu F (2015) [ | Methylprednisolone | 1 g IV 5 days 60 mg PO 1 week (1 mg/kg/day) | 1 week | IV | 2 months |
| Hao R (2015) [ | Dexamethasone | 10–15 mg/day | 3 days | IV | Until signs and lesion disappeared |
– not described, PO per os, IV intravenous injection