International Journal of Infectious Diseases (Sep 2020)

Encephalopathy in severe SARS-CoV2 infection: Inflammatory or infectious?

  • María José Abenza-Abildúa, PhD,
  • Susana Novo-Aparicio, MD,
  • Raúl Moreno-Zabaleta, PhD,
  • Maria Carmen Algarra-Lucas,
  • Blas Rojo Moreno-Arcones, MD,
  • Miguel Ángel Salvador-Maya, MD,
  • Francisco José Navacerrada-Barrero, MD,
  • Joaquín Ojeda-Ruíz de Luna, MD,
  • Carlos Pérez-López, MD,
  • José María Fraile-Vicente, MD,
  • Inés Suárez-García, PhD,
  • Eugenio Suarez-Gisbert, PhD,
  • Juan Antonio Palacios-Castaño, PhD,
  • María Teresa Ramirez-Prieto, PhD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 98
pp. 398 – 400

Abstract

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Concerning the letter by Moriguchi et al., we describe our experience with a case of encephalopathy with and atypical damage on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in a patient with severe infection due to the SARS-CoV2 virus. A 56-year-old woman, without previous pathologies, developed cough, fever, and respiratory failure for five days, after returning from a 6-day trip to Venice. Chest radiography shows a large bilateral interstitial infiltrate. In the first 24 hours, she was admitted to the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) for severe respiratory failure and positive protein chain reaction-PCR in nasal exudate. She needed intubation for ten days. In the first 48 hours outside the ICU, she developed an acute confusional syndrome (hyperactive delirium). Neurological examination showed temporal-spatial disorientation and incoherent fluent speech.An electroencephalogram (EEG) showed generalized hypovoltaic activity. Cranial magnetic resonance imaging showed a bilateral and symmetrical increase in the supratentorial white matter's signal intensity, with a discrete thickening of both temporal lobes, with a slight increase in signal intensity and a sequence of normal diffusion. The lumbar puncture showed no changes (glucose 71 mg/dL, protein 30 mg/dL, 1 leukocyte). Within 72 hours of starting symptoms, she was neurologically asymptomatic. Our final diagnosis was an inflammatory encephalopathy related to a SARS-CoV2 infection.

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