Neuro-toxoplasmosis and fatal necrotizing cerebellitis
Gabriele Gaggero; Michela Campora; Beatrice Dose; Davide Taietti; Antonio Vena; Emanuele Delfino
Abstract
Toxoplasma gondii is an obligate intracellular parasite (Protozoa family), generally hosted by cats and transmitted to humans by contact or eating undercooked infected meat. Infected individuals are usually asymptomatic, but immunocompromised persons may be severely affected: central nervous system (CNS) involvement by Toxoplasma is a typical complication of HIV/AIDS patients. It is the leading infectious cause of focal space-occupying lesions in the hemispheres and basal nuclei.
The photos above refer to a 43-year-old South-American female presented to resume HIV antiretroviral therapy, voluntarily interrupted 3 years before. On admission, she showed headache and ataxia, arisen in the preceding days, a reason for further investigations. Bacterial and viral tests were negative, excluding HIV (1.3x106 copies/mL on cerebrospinal fluid); however, the magnetic resonance (MR) revealed a cerebellar enhancing with leptomeningeal spread and mass effect compression of the 4th ventricle and mesencephalic duct, which by anatomical location explains the neurological symptoms. MR features were compatible with an infectious hypothesis and other differential diagnoses (CNS lymphoma, glial neoplasms and demyelinating processes). The infectious hypothesis was clinically preferred, so intravenous broad-spectrum antibiotic therapy was administered: despite an initial benefit, the patient's neurological condition worsened again, and she died quickly before any further diagnostic/therapeutic steps could be taken.
CNS examination, during the autopsy, revealed a dark red area on the cerebellar surface corresponding, at sagittal and horizontal cutting, to a 5 cm large reddish zone involving both cerebellar hemispheres and the vermis (
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References
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Submitted date:
02/04/2022
Accepted date:
02/07/2022
Publication date:
03/02/2022