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INTRODUCTION: Central nervous system listeriosis is a diagnostic and therapeutic challenge for the clinician. CASE REPORT: We report the case of a 66-year-old woman who was admitted for a left progressive hemiparesis associated with headaches. She was treated for one year by immunosuppressive drugs for vulgaris pemphigus. At the time of admission, examination revealed left hemiparesis without fever, and a computed tomography brain scan demonstrated a focal lesion in the right frontal lobe. Blood analyses were normal. Two days after, she suddenly developed fever (40 degrees C), and aggravation of her motor deficit followed by partial motor seizures. The cerebrospinal fluid was normal. Treatment with amoxicillin (3g IV q6h), cefotaxim, gentamycin (120mg IV q12h) and aciclovir was started empirically. The brain MRI without gadolinium displayed infiltrative lesions in the right hemisphere and in the mildbrain. The blood culture grew Listeria monocytogenes. The antimicrobial regimen was changed to amoxicillin for seven weeks and gentamicin for the first ten days. Four days after beginning the antimicrobial regimen, the brain MRI with gadolinium displayed several abscesses measuring less than one cm diameter. The clinical and imaging outcome excellent. CONCLUSION: Meningitis is by far the most central nervous system listeriosis. In our patient, the diagnosis of listeria monocytogenes encephalitis was established on the basis of positive blood cultures, as such patients do not have sterile cerebrospinal fluid.  相似文献   

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Background  Patients who present with only neurological symptoms and no pain challenge the recognition of acute aortic dissection. Results  We report three patients with completely painless acute aortic dissection who presented with left hemiparesis. All patients presented with a left-sided weakness of sudden onset. We suspected an ischemic stroke but diagnosed acute aortic dissection (DeBakey Type II, Stanford Type A). We suspect that the innominate artery is occluded when the blood flow of the false lumen is dominant. In our cases, surgical and autopsy findings showed dissection of the innominate artery. Conclusions  Highly unusual presentations of aortic dissection with acute ischemic stroke exist. A wide mediastinum on plain chest X-ray was present in all cases.  相似文献   

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Delayed presentation of spinal epidural haematoma post-trauma is rare, and portends a significant management challenge for clinicians. A 57-year-old female presented 1 week after motor vehicle accident with a 24-hour history of progressive interscapular pain and right-sided hemiparesis. Urgent spinal MRI demonstrated an extensive epidural haematoma extending from C3 to T2. The patient made an excellent post-operative neurological recovery. The importance of clinical suspicion is highlighted, especially in patients presenting with unilateral neurological deficits, as well as expeditious spinal radiography (including CT scans) and emergent surgical treatment in achieving positive clinical outcomes.  相似文献   

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We report a 67-year-old man with progressive disturbance of gait. He was well until the spring of 1993 (62 years of the age), when he noted an onset of unsteady gait. He also noted that he started to have a difficulty in playing tennis, in which he became unable to hit the ball with his racket. He also noted parkinsonian features such as bradykinesia and loss of hand dexterity. He was treated with levodopa, which did not improve his symptoms. His MRI revealed marked atrophy of the cerebellum and the pons. The criss-cross high signal lesion was seen in the center of the pons. The third ventricle was dilated. The putamen was unremarkable. His subsequent course was complicated by easy to fall, difficulty in swallowing with episodes of aspiration pneumonia. He also developed nocturnal apneustic episodes. He was admitted to our hospital on November 15, 1998, when he was 67 years of the age. He had low grade fever and low blood pressure (98/70). He was anemic but not icteric. Tumors were palpated in his jaw, anterior chest, and in the left arm. He was alert but unable to convey his desire because of dyspnea and tracheostomy. His gaze was slightly restricted in the horizontal direction and markedly so in the vertical direction. Motor functions were difficult to evaluate. His clinical course was complicated by atelectasis of the right lung and pleural effusion. He developed marked edema and oliguria. He developed sudden bradycardia and expired on December 26, 1998. He was discussed in a neurological CPC and the chief discussant arrived at the conclusion that the patient had multiple system atrophy. Majority of the audience agreed with this diagnosis. Post-mortem examination revealed a lung cancer in the right lung (undifferentiated adenocarcinoma) with metastases to the liver, kidneys, lymph nodes, pericardium, pleura, skin, bone marrow, and the brain. Neuropathologic examination revealed marked atrophy of the pons and the cerebellum. The putamen showed brownish discoloration and atrophic changes. The substantia nigra showed marked neuronal loss and gliosis. Oligodendrocytic inclusion bodies (alpha-synuclein positive) were seen in the putamen, globus pallidus, substantia nigra, pontine nucleus, cerebellar white matter, internal capsule, cerebral peduncle, and the spinal cord. These findings are consistent with the pathologic diagnosis of multiple system atrophy. What was interesting to us was the presence of neurofibrillary tangles in the substantia nigra, nucleus ruber, globus pallidus, and subthalamic nucleus. Tuft-shaped astrocytes were also seen. This patient appears to be a rare example of combination of MSA and PSP.  相似文献   

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