| Literature DB >> 33262596 |
Rui Zheng1, Qinzhou Wang2, Mingyuan Li3, Fuchen Liu4, Yongqing Zhang1, Bing Zhao1, Yuan Sun1, Dong Zhang2, Chuanzhu Yan1,2, Yuying Zhao2, Wei Li2.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Nitrous oxide (N2O) abuse has become an increasingly severe problem in China. The aim of the study was to summarize the features of N2O-induced neurology and enhance the awareness of this disease among physicians. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed the clinical, imaging, electrophysiological characteristics and the prognosis of patients with N2O neurotoxicity in our hospital from January 2016 to August 2019.Entities:
Keywords: nitrous oxide toxicity; peripheral neuropathy; psychiatric disturbance; subacute combined degeneration; vitamin B12 deficiency
Year: 2020 PMID: 33262596 PMCID: PMC7695601 DOI: 10.2147/NDT.S270179
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat ISSN: 1176-6328 Impact factor: 2.570
Basic Demographic Data and Clinical Manifestations
| X ± SN/Total N (%) (Range) | |
|---|---|
| Gender | 14 males/7 females |
| Age (years) | 22.6±4.6 (15–34) |
| N2O exposure time (months) | 7.2±5.1 (2–24) |
| Symptoms onset to see a doctor (days) | 35.6±40.4 (5–180) |
| Acute or subacute onset | 20/21(95) |
| mRS | 2.9±0.9 (1–4) |
| Limb numbness and/or weakness | 18/21 (86) |
| Psychiatric symptoms | 3/21 (14) |
| Motor dysfunction | 19/21 (90) |
| Involved four limbs | 7/19 |
| Limited to both lower limbs | 10/19 |
| Feet dorsiflexion muscle force ≤3a | 12/19 |
| Sensory deficit | 13/21 (62) |
| Peripheral sensory deficitb | 9/13 |
| Spinal cord level | 4/21 |
| Vibration sensory impairment | 15/21 (71) |
| Positive Romberg’s sign | 15/21 (71) |
| Impaired memory and computation | 1/21 (5) |
| Autonomic dysfunction | 2/21 (10) |
| Ataxia | 4/21 (19) |
| Hyporeflexia | 14/21 (67) |
| Hyperreflexia | 2/21 (10) |
| Babinski’s sign | 3/21 (14) |
Notes: aThe muscle power was evaluated using the Medical Research Council Scale (MRC). bSensory deficits included numbness, hyperalgesia, and hypersensitivity.
Abbreviations: N2O, nitrous oxide; mRS, modified Rankin Scale.
Laboratory, MRI and Electrophysiological Data
| Data | X±S | N/Total | Range | Normal Level |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vitamin B12 (pg/mL) | 385.15±323.83 | 3/18 (17) | 97–1181 | 180–914 |
| HCY (µmol/L) | 37.19±31.95 | 14/18 (78) | 3.1–134.72 | <15 |
| Folic (ng/mL) | 7.19±2.54 | 1/18 (6) | 2.89–10.01 | 3.56–20 |
| Hb (g/L) | – | 2/20 (10) | – | 130–175 (male) |
| MCV (fL) | 94.22±5.22 | 3/20 (15) | 85.4–102.6 | 82–100 |
| MMA in urine (µmol/L) | 2.46±2.86 | 2/7 (29) | 0–8.4 | 0.3–3.6 |
| MMA gene | – | 0/3 | – | Negative (–) |
| T2 hyperintensity on spinal cord MRI | – | 8/17 (47) | – | – |
| Axon damage (EMG) | – | 17/20 (85) | – | – |
| Abnormal brain MRI | – | 0/10 | – | – |
| Elevated CSF protein | – | 4/9 (44) | – | – |
Notes: *N/Total N (%): Abnormal Number/ Total Number(%)
Abbreviations: RBC, red blood cell; Hb, hemoglobin; MCV, mean corpuscular volume; MMA, methylmalonic acid; EMG, electromyography; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; CSF, cerebral spinal fluid.
Figure 1Serial cervical spinal cord MRI in patient with N2O intoxication. (A and D) MRI was performed at the time of first admission. T2-weighted sagittal images showed increased signal intensity and obviously swelling in the cervical spinal cord extending from C2 to C5. T2-weighted axial image showed abnormal signal involving the posterior columns and lateral columns of cervical cord with inverted V sign. (B and E) MRI performed one month later showed the spinal swelling mitigated. T2-weighted axial image still showed inverted V sign. (C and F) MRI performed one year later showed the disappearance of T2WI abnormal signal.
Figure 2The serial serum vitamin B12 and HCY level during 12 months follow-up.
Figure 3The changes of the nerves’ complex muscle action potential (CMAP) in patient with N2O intoxication. On initial admission, the patient developed severe symptoms and the CMAP of the peripheral nerve deteriorated rapidly. After stopping the exposure of N2O and high-dose vitamin B12 supplementation therapy, the CMAP of these nerves recovered gradually.