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Wilson's disease: evoked potentials and computed tomography
Authors:E S Roach  C S Ford  E V Spudis  A R Riela  W T McLean Jr  J Gilliam  M R Ball
Institution:(1) Department of Neurology, Bowman Gray School of Medicine of Wake Forest University, 300 South Hawthorne Road, 27103 Winston-Salem, NC, USA;(2) Department of Medicine, Bowman Gray School of Medicine of Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, USA;(3) Department of Radiology, Bowman Gray School of Medicine of Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, USA
Abstract:Summary Multi-modality evoked potentials and computed cranial tomography (CT) were performed in ten patients with Wilson's disease to determine if any of these studies would correlate reliably with neurologic status. While all four patients with CT abnormality had neurologic signs, two additional patients with neurologic findings had normal scans. Evoked responses were normal in nine patients. The remaining patient displayed abnormal visual, brainstem, and somatosensory evoked potentials, and follow-up studies after clinical deterioration revealed worsening of the brainstem and visual evoked potentials. This patient died unexpectedly from a subdural hematoma, and postmortem examination confirmed the radiographic findings of cortical atrophy of the cerebrum and cerebellum and bilateral cystic degeneration of the basal ganglia. However, localized demyelination in the visual, auditory, and sensory pathways was not present. We conclude that the clinical neurologic status of patients with Wilson's disease cannot be reliably predicted by either CT or multi-modality evoked potentials.
Keywords:Wilson's disease  Evoked potentials  Computed tomography
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