Nkam I, Cottereau M-J
Hôpital Maison-Blanche, Secteur Montmartre, 3 avenue Jean-Jaurès, 93330 Neuilly-sur-Marne.
Encephale. 2006 May-Jun;32(3 Pt 1):385-8. doi: 10.1016/s0013-7006(06)77335-3.
Behçet's disease is a multisystem vasculitis of unknown origin. The prevalence of the disease varies widely and is high in the Eastern Mediterranean Basin, North Africa, Iran and Japan. Many clinical features of Behçet's disease have been described and the international study group for Behçet's disease has defined a set of diagnostic criteria. These require the presence of recurrent oral ulcers plus two of the following: recurrent genital ulcerations, typical defined eye lesions, typical defined skin lesions or a positive pathergy test (a skin hypersensitivity reaction to a non-specific physical insult; when positive, the response consists of a papule or pustule that develops after 24 to 48 hours at the site of a needle prick to the skin). Although not included in these diagnostic criteria, there are some other features commonly seen in patients with Behçet's disease: thrombophlebitis, oligo-arthritis, gastrointestinal ulcerations and neurological involvement. Neuro-Behçet is well described in Behçet's disease, with variable prevalence rates between 5.3 and 35%. This prevalence is probably affected by the type of study (retrospective or prospective) and regional and ethnic variations in disease expression. Psychiatric symptoms usually occur as incidental findings in some patients with neurological disease; they are misdiagnosed and mistreated.
CASE-REPORT: The patient described here developed acute psychotic symptoms without parenchymal cerebral involvement, and negative symptoms during Behçet's disease. Two hypotheses were evoked: schizophrenia associated with Behçet's disease versus psychiatric syndrome induced by vasculitis. Such a case has not been reported in the literature. We describe the case of a 31-year-old Haitian female, admitted because of an acute psychosis. She developed hallucination, misrecognition, psychomotor hyperactivity and delusion about her million childbirths. The patient had three years history of mistreated Behçet's disease, in particular recurrent oral ulcers, iritis and cardiovascular manifestations. She also had a history of uterine tumour, rectal carcinoid tumour and recurrent pleurisies. One year ago, she presented breast lymphangitis, anxiety, unusual thought content, hostility, suspiciousness, and poor impulse control: cranial computerised tomography scan was normal. After ten days of hospitalization, she complained of oral and genital aphta and no neurological sign was found. The cerebral angiographic magnetic resonance imaging showed a thrombophlebitis of the left lateral sinus without parenchymal involvement. Haloperidol, Heparin, Colchicine, Cyclophosphamide and Prednisone were introduced. Six months after, delirium and Behçet's symptoms had disappeared with the following treatment: Risperidone, Alprazolam, Zolpidem, Colchicine, Prednisone, and Azathioprine. The patient has developed enduring negative symptoms: blunted affect, social withdrawal, difficulty in abstract thinking, lack of spontaneity and flow of conversation and poor rapport. They are still present. This patient had two acute psychotic symptoms without parenchymal pattern. After treatment, she had persistent negative symptoms and psychosocial deterioration. This evolution is commonly seen in schizophrenia.
Retrospective analysis of this patient's course suggests that -psychiatric episodes were always associated with physical manifestations. However, pleurisies, lymphangitis, uterine and rectal tumours have never been described in Behçet's disease. This vasculitis occurs less frequently in the Caribbean than in Mediterranean, Middle East or Japan. It seemed that this patient had a psychotic syndrome and a chronic relapsing multisystem disorder, more complex than Behçet's disease. A prospective study would be useful to characterize psychiatric patterns of Behçet's disease and establish their relationships with physical manifestations, especially neurological involvement.
白塞病是一种病因不明的多系统血管炎。该病的患病率差异很大,在东地中海盆地、北非、伊朗和日本较高。白塞病的许多临床特征已被描述,白塞病国际研究小组也定义了一套诊断标准。这些标准要求存在复发性口腔溃疡,外加以下情况中的两种:复发性生殖器溃疡、典型的明确眼部病变、典型的明确皮肤病变或针刺反应阳性(对非特异性物理刺激的皮肤过敏反应;阳性时,反应表现为在皮肤针刺部位24至48小时后出现的丘疹或脓疱)。虽然这些诊断标准中未包括,但白塞病患者中还常见一些其他特征:血栓性静脉炎、少关节炎、胃肠道溃疡和神经受累。神经白塞病在白塞病中有详细描述,患病率在5.3%至35%之间变化。这种患病率可能受研究类型(回顾性或前瞻性)以及疾病表现的区域和种族差异影响。精神症状通常在一些神经系统疾病患者中作为偶然发现出现;它们常被误诊和误治。
本文所述患者在白塞病期间出现无实质性脑受累的急性精神病症状以及阴性症状。引发了两种假设:与白塞病相关的精神分裂症与血管炎诱发的精神综合征。文献中尚未报道过此类病例。我们描述了一名31岁海地女性的病例,她因急性精神病入院。她出现幻觉、错认、精神运动性多动以及关于自己生育百万子女的妄想。该患者有三年治疗不当的白塞病病史,尤其是复发性口腔溃疡、虹膜炎和心血管表现。她还有子宫肿瘤、直肠类癌肿瘤和复发性胸膜炎病史。一年前,她出现乳腺淋巴管炎、焦虑、异常思维内容、敌意、猜疑以及冲动控制差的情况:头颅计算机断层扫描正常。住院十天后,她诉说口腔和生殖器出现阿弗他溃疡,未发现神经体征。脑血管造影磁共振成像显示左侧外侧窦血栓性静脉炎,无实质性受累。给予了氟哌啶醇、肝素、秋水仙碱、环磷酰胺和泼尼松。六个月后,谵妄和白塞病症状在以下治疗后消失:利培酮、阿普唑仑、唑吡坦、秋水仙碱、泼尼松和硫唑嘌呤。患者出现了持久的阴性症状:情感迟钝、社交退缩、抽象思维困难、缺乏自发性和流畅的对话以及关系淡漠。这些症状仍然存在。该患者出现了两种无实质性病变模式的急性精神病症状。治疗后,她有持续的阴性症状和社会心理恶化。这种演变在精神分裂症中很常见。
对该患者病程的回顾性分析表明,精神发作总是与身体表现相关。然而,胸膜炎、淋巴管炎、子宫和直肠肿瘤在白塞病中从未被描述过。这种血管炎在加勒比地区的发生频率低于地中海、中东或日本。似乎该患者有一种精神综合征和一种慢性复发性多系统疾病,比白塞病更复杂。前瞻性研究将有助于明确白塞病的精神模式,并确定它们与身体表现,尤其是神经受累之间的关系。