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Title: Case presentation


1
  • Case presentation
  • Dr Aysha Alshareef
  • Neurology consultant, Assistant professor

2
history

the case was referred to neurology team from ob
ward she was 34 y old chadian F, P10 ,2 days
post CS Acute Confusion ,recurent generalized
GTC seizure ?headache, h/o other neurological
symptoms ? No fever. No similar attak in the
past Drugs unremarkable Socialmarried ,living
in Jeddah No h/o hypertension, or other medical
illness
3
O/E
  • Vital sign BP 189/88, afebrile
  • General no lower limb edema
  • Neurological
  • no neck stifness
  • She was disoriented ,no papilledeoma
  • No focal neurological signs,moving all
    limbs,hyper reflexea,planter were bilaterally
    down going
  • Other systems unremarkable.

4
Differential diagnosis
  • Post partum Recurrent seizure encephalopathy
  • Eclampsia
  • Hypertensive encephalopathy
  • Cerebral venous thrombosis
  • Arterial stroke
  • Others metabolic , encephalities

5
Work up
  • CBC
  • UE
  • LFT
  • Urine for protien -ve

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CT brain
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  • MRI

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P R E S
16
  • P posterior
  • R Reversible
  • E encephalopathy
  • S syndrome

17
RPES
  • is a clinical radiologic syndrome of
    heterogeneous etiologies that are grouped
    together because of similar findings on
    neuroimaging studies.

18
Posterior reversible leukoencephalopathy syndrome
  • It is also often referred to as
  • Reversible posterior cerebral edema syndrome
  • RPLS (reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy
    syndrome)
  • Hyperperfusion encephalopathy
  • Brain capillary leak syndrome

19
  • it was first codified as a single named syndrome
    in a 1996 .
  • This described a clinical syndrome of insidious
    onset of headache, confusion or decreased level
    of consciousness, visual changes, and seizures,
    which was associated with characteristic
    neuroimaging findings of posterior cerebral white
    matter oedema.

  • N Engl J Med
    1996 Feb 22334(8)494-500.


20
EPIDEMIOLOGY
  • (RPES) is increasingly recognized and reported in
    case reports and case series
  • however, the incidence of RPES is not known.
  • Patients in all age groups appear susceptible


  • AJNR Am J Neuroradiol 2002 Jun-Jul23(6)1038-48.
  • reported cases exist in patients as young as two
    years and as old as 90 years.
  • Case series suggest that PRES is more common in
    women, even when patients with eclampsia are
    excluded .

  • Neurology 1998 Nov51(5)1369-76


21
PATHOGENESIS
  •   The pathogenesis of PRES remains unclear, but
    it appears to be related to
  • disordered cerebral autoregulation and
  • endothelial dysfunction.

22
  • Autoregulatory failure
    Endothelial dysfunction
  • vasodilatation
    capillar leakage
  • hyperperfusion
    disruption BBB
  • Vasogenic edeoma

23
  • Anatomic distribution 
  • WHY WHITE MATTER DISEASE?
  • The cortex, structurally more tightly packed
    than the white matter, resists accumulation of
    edema, hence predilection of abnormalities to be
    seen in the white matter
  • WHY POSTERIOR REGION ?
  • A histochemical study revealed a greater
    concentration of adrenergic nerves around pial
    and intracerebral vessels in the anterior
    circulation than posteriorly . This observation
    may explain why the hyperperfusion and edema is
    mainly seen in the posterior circulation in RPLS.

  • Acta Physiol Scand 1981
    Feb111(2)193-9

24
Clinical presentation
  •  The clinical syndrome of reversible posterior
    leukoencephalopathy syndrome (RPLS) is
    characterized by
  • Headaches
  • Altered consciousness
  • Visual disturbances
  • Seizures
  • The headache is typically constant, nonlocalized,
    moderate to severe, and unresponsive to analgesia
    .
  • Altered consciousness ranges from mild somnolence
    to confusion and agitation, progressing to stupor
    or coma in extreme cases .
  • Seizures are usually generalized tonic clonic
    they may begin focally and often recur. Status
    epilepticus has been reported
  • Preceding visual loss or visual hallucinations
    suggest occipital lobe origin in some patients.


  • Intern Med J 2005 Feb35(2)83-90

25
Signs
  • Visual perception abnormalities are often
    detectable. Hemianopia, visual neglect, auras,
    visual hallucinations, and cortical blindness may
    occur . The latter may be accompanied by denial
    of blindness (Anton's syndrome).
  • The funduscopic examination is often normal,
    particularly in eclamptic and chronically
    hypertensive patients, but papilledema may be
    present with accompanying flame-shaped retinal
    hemorrhages and exudates.
  • The deep tendon reflexes are frequently brisk
    with Babinski signs often present .
  • . Other focal neurologic deficits are rare.
  • Hypertension is frequent but not invariable. The
    hypertensive crisis may precede the neurologic
    syndrome by 24 hours or longer .


  • Intern Med J 2005 Feb35(2)83-90

26
Risk factors
  • Common
  • Hypertension encephalopathy
  • Eclampsia
  • Acute and chronic renal failure
  • Immunosuppressive agents and cytotoxic drugs




  • Acta Physiol Scand 1981 Feb111(2)193-9

27
Immunosuppressive and immunomodulatory drugs
  • Cyclosporine A ,
  • Bevacizumab,
  • Cisplatin Combination chemotherapy, Cytarabine
    Gemcitabine
  • Interferon-alpha
  • Intravenous immunoglobulin
  • Methotrexate
  • Rituximab
  • Sirolimus
  • Sorafenib
  • Sunitinib
  • Tacrolimus
  • Vincristine

28
Risk factors
  • Other reported causes
  • Hemolytic and uremic syndrome
  • Collagen vascular disorders
  • leukemia
  • Behcets syndrome
  • TTP
  • HIV
  • Acute intermittent prophyria
  • Hypercalcemia,hypomagnesmia
  • Contrast media exposure
  • Cryoglobulinemia

29
Hypertensive encephalopathy 
  • sever hypertension, Rapidly developing, or
    intermittent hypertension carries a particular
    risk for hypertensive encephalopathy .
  • untreated or under treated chronic hypertension
    also carry risk of PRES
  • PRES is more common, in patients with comorbid
    conditions

30
Eclampsia 
  • Some suggest that PRES (typical clinical syndrome
    and neuroimaging findings) could be considered an
    indicator of eclampsia, even when the other
    features of eclampsia (proteinuria, hypertension)
    are not present .


  • Br J Obstet Gynaecol 1997
    Oct104(10)1165-72.

31
Immunosuppressive therapy
  •  The neurotoxic effects of these therapies are
    well known but still poorly understood.
  • Toxic levels of medications are not required for
    the development of PRES
  • prior exposure to the drug does not appear to
    be protective .
  • Even after several months of exposure to the
    drug, patients with therapeutic levels can be
    symptomatic .


  • Mol Interv 2004 Apr4(2)97-107.

32
  • Cyclosporine is one of the more common cytotoxic
    therapies associated with PRES.
  • After renal toxicity, neurotoxicity is the most
    serious side effect with cyclosporine.
  • affecting 25 percent to 59 percent of transplant
    patients.
  • Hypomagnesemia, and hypertension have all been
    implicated in facilitating cyclosporine
    neurotoxicity .

  • J Biol Chem 2002 Aug 16277(33)29669-73.
    Epub 2002 Jun 5.

33
  • DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS 
  • Arterial stroke , Particularly in cases with a
    sudden onset of neurologic symptoms, the
    presentation can mimic bilateral posterior
    cerebral artery infarctions ("top of the basilar
    syndrome").
  • cerebral venous thrombosis
  • Others
  • demyelinating toxic or metabolic encephalopathy,
    , vasculitis, or encephalitis , ,among others .
  • It is important to distinguish between PRES and
    ischemic stroke, as the treatment of hypertension
    may be very different in these conditions.
  • J Neurol
    Neurosurg Psychiatry 2000 Aug69(2)248-5

34
  • NEUROIMAGING
  • Neuroimaging is essential to the diagnosis of
    reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy syndrome
    (PRES)
  • magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is the best
    modalities .
  • Typical findings are symmetrical white matter
    edema in the posterior cerebral hemispheres,
    particularly the parieto-occipital regions, but
    variations do occur .
  • Complete resolution of neuroimaging findings
    within days to weeks is expected.


  • J Neuroimaging 2004
    Apr14(2)89-96.

35
  • DIAGNOSIS 
  •  There are no specific diagnostic criteria for
    reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy syndrome
    (RPLS).
  • clinical and radiological findings.

36
PREVENTION AND TREATMENT
  •   (PRES) should be promptly recognized, since it
    is usually reversible.
  • Treating clinicians should have a high clinical
    suspicion in the appropriate settings
  • Treat underlying risk factors(
    hypertension,eclampsia, stop immunosupression )

37
  • Hypertension 
  • with lowering blood pressure , patients will
    often improve dramatically.
  • For patients with lower levels hypertension,
    lowering blood pressure is also recommended to
    treat PRES
  • this goal should be achieved within two to six
    hours, with the maximum initial fall in BP not
    exceeding 25 percent of the presenting value.

  • Lancet 2000 Jul 29356(9227)411-7

38
  • IV drugs such as nicardipine, labetalol, and
    nitroprusside are effective and safe in reducing
    the blood pressure to a desirable range .
  • Oral antihypertensive are not usually effective
    to treat PRESS.

39
  • PROGNOSIS
  •  Most case series and case reports suggest that
    (PRESS) is often benign.
  • In many cases,PRES seems to be fully reversible
    within a period of days to weeks, after removal
    of the inciting factor and control of the blood
    pressure.

40
  • However, one of the largest case series reported
    highlights the potential grave consequences of
    this disorder among 22 patients studied, six
    died and many survivors had permanent neurologic
    disability
  • . Death may result from progressive cerebral
    edema, intracerebral hemorrhage, or as a
    complication of the underlying condition .
  • Arch Neurol. 2008
    Feb65(2)205-10

41
SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS
  • (PRES) is a neurologic syndrome defined by
    clinical and radiologic features.
  • The typical clinical syndrome includes headache,
    confusion, visual symptoms, and seizures. Typical
    MRI findings are consistent with vasogenic edema
    and are predominantly localized to the posterior
    cerebral hemispheres. DWI can be helpful in
    distinguishing PRES from stroke.
  • Prompt reduction of blood pressure or withdrawal
    of immunosuppressive agents leads rapid reversal
    of the syndrome
  • It is important to distinguish between PRES and
    ischemic stroke, as the treatment of hypertension
    may be very different in these conditions.,

42
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