Service de Neurologie AP-HP, Hôpital Lariboisière, Paris Cedex, France.
Int J Stroke. 2011 Dec;6(6):487-92. doi: 10.1111/j.1747-4949.2011.00620.x. Epub 2011 Oct 21.
While the association between inflammatory bowel diseases and thromboembolic events has long been evident, cerebral venous thrombosis in this context remains rare and underreported.
Among 351 consecutive patients with cerebral venous thrombosis collected in two neurology departments between 1997 and 2009, an analysis of patients with inflammatory bowel disease and a review of literature were performed.
Eight patients had inflammatory bowel disease (6/287, 2/64), Crohn's disease in two, and ulcerative colitis in two. The mean age was 30 · 9 years (18-45). All inflammatory bowel disease-related cerebral venous thrombosis patients had headache, four patients had focal neurological deficits, three had altered consciousness, and two had seizures. Cerebral venous thrombosis occurred between two-months and 17 years after the first inflammatory bowel disease signs. Six patients had other venous prothrombotic risk factors. All patients were treated with heparin or low-molecular-weight heparin. Seven showed a complete recovery (Rankin 0-1) and one a partial recovery (Rankin 2). Compared with the 49 magnetic resonance imaging-confirmed cerebral venous thrombosis patients of the literature, our patients had more frequent associated prothrombotic risk factors. When comparing 57 inflammatory bowel disease-related cerebral venous thrombosis patients with other cerebral venous thrombosis, those with inflammatory bowel disease were younger in age at cerebral venous thrombosis onset, and there was a higher male to female ratio and a lower headache frequency at presentation.
In our cerebral venous thrombosis cohort, inflammatory bowel disease is present in 2 · 3% of cases. As cerebral venous thrombosis has no specific feature and may reveal inflammatory bowel disease, intestinal signs should be systematically looked for. All physicians caring for inflammatory bowel disease patients must consider cerebral venous thrombosis in cases of unusual headache or focal neurological symptoms. Treatment is based on full anticoagulation and specific inflammatory bowel disease treatment.
虽然炎症性肠病与血栓栓塞事件之间的关联早已显而易见,但在这种情况下,脑静脉血栓形成仍然很少见且报道不足。
在 1997 年至 2009 年间,在两个神经内科部门共收集了 351 例连续的脑静脉血栓形成患者,对患有炎症性肠病的患者进行了分析,并对文献进行了回顾。
8 例患者患有炎症性肠病(287 例中有 6 例,64 例中有 2 例),其中克罗恩病 2 例,溃疡性结肠炎 2 例。平均年龄为 30.9 岁(18-45 岁)。所有炎症性肠病相关脑静脉血栓形成患者均有头痛,4 例有局灶性神经功能缺损,3 例意识改变,2 例癫痫发作。脑静脉血栓形成发生在首次出现炎症性肠病症状后 2 个月至 17 年。6 例患者有其他静脉血栓形成的危险因素。所有患者均接受肝素或低分子量肝素治疗。7 例完全恢复(Rankin 0-1),1 例部分恢复(Rankin 2)。与文献中 49 例磁共振成像证实的脑静脉血栓形成患者相比,我们的患者有更多的伴发血栓形成危险因素。当比较 57 例炎症性肠病相关脑静脉血栓形成患者与其他脑静脉血栓形成患者时,炎症性肠病患者脑静脉血栓形成发病年龄更小,男女比例更高,且首发时头痛频率更低。
在我们的脑静脉血栓形成队列中,炎症性肠病的发生率为 2.3%。由于脑静脉血栓形成没有特异性特征,可能会出现炎症性肠病,因此应系统地寻找肠道症状。所有治疗炎症性肠病患者的医生都必须在出现不寻常头痛或局灶性神经症状时考虑脑静脉血栓形成。治疗基于充分抗凝和特定的炎症性肠病治疗。