| Literature DB >> 32458196 |
Torstein R Meling1,2,3, Aria Nouri4, Adrien May4, Nils Guinand5, Maria Isabel Vargas6,7, Christophe Destrieux8,9.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: CNS cavernomas are a type of raspberry-shaped vascular malformations that are typically asymptomatic, but can result in haemorrhage, neurological injury, and seizures. Here, we present a rare case of a brainstem cavernoma that was surgically resected whereafter an upbeat nystagmus presented postoperatively. CASE REPORT: A 42-year old man presented with sudden-onset nausea, vomiting, vertigo, blurred vision, marked imbalance and difficulty swallowing. Neurological evaluation showed bilateral ataxia, generalized hyperreflexia with left-sided predominance, predominantly horizontal gaze evoked nystagmus on right and left gaze, slight left labial asymmetry, uvula deviation to the right, and tongue deviation to the left. MRI demonstrated a 13-mm cavernoma with haemorrhage and oedema in the medulla oblongata. Surgery was performed via a minimal-invasive, midline approach. Complete excision was confirmed on postoperative MRI. The patient recovered well and became almost neurologically intact. However, he complained of mainly vertical oscillopsia. The videonystagmography revealed a new-onset spontaneous upbeat nystagmus in all gaze directions, not suppressed by fixation. An injury of the rarely described intercalatus nucleus/nucleus of Roller is thought to be the cause.Entities:
Keywords: Cavernoma; Complication; Nucleus intercalatus; Nystagmus
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32458196 PMCID: PMC7501124 DOI: 10.1007/s00415-020-09891-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol ISSN: 0340-5354 Impact factor: 4.849
Fig. 1Video-oculographic recording of the horizontal and vertical position of the right eye is shown in different gaze conditions: a straight-ahead gaze, b lateral gaze and c vertical gaze. The upbeat component is present in all gaze conditions. In the straight-ahead and downward gaze conditions, a discrete horizontal component to the right is observed
Fig. 2Ex vivo image of the brain stem obtained at 11.7 T (T2 weighted, 100 microns isotropic) showing the hypoglossal (h), motor dorsal of the vagus (mdv), giganto-cellular reticularis (Gi), prepositus (Pr) and intercalated (ic) nuclei and the middle longitudinal fasciculus in axial (a), sagittal (b), and coronal (c) orientations. The postoperative cavity was rigidly co-registered onto this atlas, displayed in brown and bordered by a yellow dot line [3]
Fig. 3Pathophysiology of vertical nystagmus proposed by Deselligny and Milea [4]. a Normal situation. The ventral tegmental tract (VTT) originates from the superior vestibular nucleus (SNV), decussates at the pontine level and projects onto the nuclei of the inferior oblique and superior rectus muscles. It thus induces an elevation of the eyeball. The SVN is also excitatory for the perihypoglossal nuclei (PHN), which inhibit the flocculus (Floc). The latter finally sends back inhibitory projections to SVN. b Upbeat nystagmus secondary to lesion of the VTT (pons). Since the SVN-VTT complex cannot stimulate elevating muscles, a slow downward movement of the gaze occurs, periodically compensated by saccades directed upwards. c Upbeat nystagmus secondary to lesions of the PHN (medulla). A lesion of the intercalated or Roller nuclei suppress the physiological inhibition of the flocculus (Floc). This reinforces the normal inhibition of SVN by Floc. Finally, the decreased activity in SVN has the same consequences as lesion A (upbeat nystagmus)