| Literature DB >> 33178484 |
Ritwik Ghosh1, Souvik Dubey2, Subhankar Chatterjee3, Mrinalkanti Ghosh4, Biman Kanti Ray2, Julián Benito-León5,6,7.
Abstract
Background: Manganese associated neurotoxicity and neurodegeneration is quite rare yet established neurological disorder. This neurotoxic element has predilection for depositing in basal ganglia structures, manifesting mainly as parkinsonian and dystonic movement disorders with behavioral abnormalities. Case report: We report a 40-year-old man who presented with a subacute onset bilateral, asymmetric hyperkinetic movement disorder (predominantly left sided chorea) with multi-domain cognitive impairment, dysarthria, and generalized rigidity. Clinical history and examination yielded multiple differential diagnoses including deposition and metabolic disorders, autoimmune and paraneoplastic encephalitis involving basal ganglia, and neurodegenerative disorders with chorea and cognitive impairment. However, magnetic resonance imaging was suggestive of paramagnetic substance deposition, which came out to be manganese after laboratory investigations. History, clinical examinations, and investigation results pointed towards a diagnosis of acquired hypermanganesemia due to over-ingestion of manganese containing substance (i.e., black tea). He was treated symptomatically and with chelation therapy (calcium disodium edetate). At the sixth month of follow-up, complete resolution of chorea, dysarthria and partial amelioration of rigidity were observed. His cognitive decline and behavioral abnormalities improved. Discussion: This is probably the first reported case of acquired hypermanganesemia that presented as a combination of asymmetric chorea and cognitive dysfunction with atypical imaging characteristics. The clinical picture mimicked that of Huntington's disease. We highlight the potential deleterious effects of an apparently "benign" non-alcoholic beverage (i.e., black tea) on cerebral metabolism. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: Chorea; Cognition; Dementia; Hypermanganesemia; Manganese; Movement disorder; Tea
Year: 2020 PMID: 33178484 PMCID: PMC7597573 DOI: 10.5334/tohm.537
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Tremor Other Hyperkinet Mov (N Y) ISSN: 2160-8288
VideoAsymmetric choreic movements in a case of acquired hypermanganesemia. Video demonstrating involuntary, rapid dance-like movements involving predominantly left upper and lower limbs that flow from one muscle to the other in continuous fashion suggestive of a predominantly left hemichorea (Although the patient had bilateral chorea, left much more than right with motor impersistence, this is not demonstrated in the video).
Figure 1Brain MRI shows non-enhancing bilateral increased signal intensity on axial T1-weighted (A), axial T2-weighted (B) and axial T2-fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR)-weighted (C) images in basal ganglia, with scattered areas of gliosis (T1-weighted images). Gradient-echo axial T2*-weighted image (D) shows no evidence of signal blooming (unlike iron or calcium deposition, manganese deposition does not cause blooming on gradient-echo images or susceptibility-weighted imaging).
Figure 3Schematic diagram of the timeline of events in relation to serum manganese level and Mini Mental Status Examination (MMSE) along time.
Figure 2Follow-up brain MRI after 6 months: Axial T1-weighted image (A) shows heterogenous signal changes (i.e. bilateral increased signal intensity in basal ganglia possibly due to manganese deposition along with hypointense gliotic areas with mild dilatation of frontal horns of both lateral ventricles). Axial T2-weighted (B) and T2-FLAIR-weighted (C) images show iso- to hypointense signal changes at the areas of deposits and scattered gliotic foci with central hypo and peripheral hyperintense signal changes. Gradient-echo axial T2*-weighted image (D) shows no evidence of signal blooming.