Agapoff Iv James R
Department of Psychiatry, University of Hawai'i at Mānoa, John A. Burns School of Medicine, Honolulu, HI, USA.
Case Rep Rheumatol. 2021 Oct 28;2021:5321438. doi: 10.1155/2021/5321438. eCollection 2021.
Mixed connective tissue disease (MCTD) often presents as a slow progressive illness with low morbidity and mortality. Serious central nervous system disease is uncommon, and fatal outcomes are rarely seen. Here, we report a rare case of fatal hemorrhagic stroke in a 43-year-old female with a rapidly progressive MCTD. She presented to primary care with a history of headaches, visual disturbances, and unprovoked lower extremity swelling and pain. A rheumatological workup showed positive antinuclear (ANA) and ribonucleoprotein (RNP) antibodies. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) found a 12 mm hemorrhage along a cortical sulcus of the right frontal lobe, and a follow-up magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) and ophthalmological exam showed no definitive signs of vasculitis. Over the course of her workup, she developed swollen hands, Raynaud's syndrome, myalgias, and synovitis characteristic of evolving MCTD. The patient then began to experience severe headaches over one month. Repeat MRI was ordered, but never completed, and the patient presented to the emergency department (ED) with a severe, right-sided headache, and left-sided visual disturbance. In the ED, she began to display evidence of delirium and seizure activity and became unresponsive. A computerized tomography scan (CT) of the brain showed a right parietal lobe intraparenchymal hemorrhage approximately 5 × 3 × 5 cm in size with secondary mass effect including mid- and hind-brain herniation. Computerized tomography angiography (CTA) of the brain showed signs of large vessel vasculitis. A craniectomy was performed; however, the patient never regained consciousness and died several days later. Vasculitis, while rare in connective tissue diseases, should be aggressively assessed for and managed in patients with any early signs and symptoms of cerebrovascular involvement to prevent fatal outcomes.
混合性结缔组织病(MCTD)通常表现为一种进展缓慢、发病率和死亡率较低的疾病。严重的中枢神经系统疾病并不常见,致命结局也很少见。在此,我们报告一例罕见的致命性出血性中风病例,患者为一名43岁患有快速进展性MCTD的女性。她因头痛、视觉障碍以及无故出现的下肢肿胀和疼痛病史就诊于初级保健机构。风湿学检查显示抗核(ANA)抗体和核糖核蛋白(RNP)抗体呈阳性。磁共振成像(MRI)发现右额叶皮质沟处有一处12毫米的出血,后续的磁共振血管造影(MRA)和眼科检查未发现明确的血管炎迹象。在检查过程中,她出现了双手肿胀、雷诺综合征、肌痛以及滑膜炎,这些都是MCTD进展期的特征表现。随后患者在一个多月的时间里开始出现严重头痛。再次安排了MRI检查,但未完成,患者因严重的右侧头痛和左侧视觉障碍就诊于急诊科(ED)。在急诊科,她开始出现谵妄和癫痫活动的迹象,并失去意识。脑部计算机断层扫描(CT)显示右顶叶脑实质内出血,大小约为5×3×5厘米,伴有继发性占位效应,包括中脑和后脑疝形成。脑部计算机断层血管造影(CTA)显示有大血管血管炎的迹象。进行了颅骨切除术;然而,患者一直未恢复意识,几天后死亡。血管炎在结缔组织疾病中虽罕见,但对于有任何早期脑血管受累迹象和症状的患者,应积极进行评估和管理,以预防致命结局。