[Hypoglycemic encephalopathy demonstrating generalized multiple cortical infarctions--sequential CT findings].

1993 
: A fifty-nine-year-old alcoholic man with severe hypoglycemic encephalopathy was examined using sequential CT scans of the brain (CT). Twenty-seven hours after the attack, which resulted in a comatose state, CT disclosed multiple low density areas throughout the cerebral cortex which resembled multiple cortical infarctions. CT obtained four days after the ictus demonstrated more prominent low density areas in the cerebral cortex, diffuse cerebral edema and partial cortical enhancement after administration of contrast medium. Sixteen days after the ictus, the multiple low density areas in the cerebral cortex disappeared. Enhanced CT on day 23 demonstrated marked gyral enhancement throughout the cerebral cortex. Thereafter diffuse brain atrophy progressed rapidly as demonstrated by MRI on day 82 which showed extensive cortical and subcortical atrophy particularly in the frontoparietal and parieto-occipital regions bilaterally with dilated lateral ventricles. Hypoglycemia and anoxia have long been thought to give rise to similar types of brain damage based on neuropathological observations. But it has recently been shown that they are quite different based on neurochemical and neurophysiological findings. Numerous previously reported autopsy cases of hypoglycemia confirm these findings which are neuropathologically similar to the multiple infarction seen in the present case. We conclude that the acute cortical changes of the present case are specific for hypoglycemic encephalopathy. The findings indicate that the basic mechanisms operating in hypoglycemia and anoxia are different.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    4
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []