Magnetic Resonance Imaging Findings of Pediatric Neurobrucellosis

Brucellosis is an endemic disease often observed in the Mediterranean and Middle East regions. Systemic brucellosis is the most frequent clinical form of this infection; however, hematogenic spread may result in the focal form of the disease. Neurobrucellosis is a rare disease seen in 0, 5-25 % of t...

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Main Authors: Gulnur Erdem, Serdal Gungor, Alpay Alkan, Yilmaz Tabel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Society of TURAZ AKADEMI 2014-12-01
Series:Medicine Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ejmanager.com/fulltextpdf.php?mno=160601
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spelling doaj-56ec02a6dc504868932ede82d10afa6b2020-11-25T01:06:09ZengSociety of TURAZ AKADEMI Medicine Science2147-06342014-12-013417324210.5455/medscience.2014.03.8157160601Magnetic Resonance Imaging Findings of Pediatric NeurobrucellosisGulnur Erdem0Serdal Gungor1Alpay Alkan2Yilmaz Tabel3Inonu University, School of Medicine, Department of Radiology Inonu University, School of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics Department of Radiology, Bezmialem University Medical Faculty, Istanbul, Turkey Inonu University, School of Medicine, Department of PediatricsBrucellosis is an endemic disease often observed in the Mediterranean and Middle East regions. Systemic brucellosis is the most frequent clinical form of this infection; however, hematogenic spread may result in the focal form of the disease. Neurobrucellosis is a rare disease seen in 0, 5-25 % of the adults with systemic brucellosis. 0,8 % of the children affected by systemic brucellosis are reported to have neurological complications. A 16 year old female applied with the complaints of headache, vomiting, bilateral hip and knee pain, and inability to walk. Physical and laboratory examination, brain computed tomography (CT) brain and cervical spinal MRI were carried out as well as the magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) of the lesion areas in the brain. On MRI hydrocephaly in 3rd, 4th and lateral ventricles, atrophic dilatation in bilateral hemispheric cortical sulcuses were seen. On T2W and FLAIR images, hyperintense focal nodular lesions not accompanied by pathological contrast enhancement were detected on parietal subcortical white matter and the periventricular deep white matter. Dural thickening and contrast enhancement on the bilateral parietal region were observed. On cervical spinal MRI, leptomeningeal enhancing was at the level of C1-C7. On MRS applied to lesions in brain (TE 136 and 31 ms), lactate peak at 1.3 ppm was observed. In the differential diagnosis of central nervous system diseases in children living in endemic regions, neurobrucellosis should be kept in mind, though observed rarely. In these cases, the neurological system involvement that cannot be demonstrated via CT, can be shown with MRI effectively. [Med-Science 2014; 3(4.000): 1732-42]http://www.ejmanager.com/fulltextpdf.php?mno=160601Neurobrucellosismagnetic resonance imagingmagnetic resonance spectroscopypediatric
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gulnur Erdem
Serdal Gungor
Alpay Alkan
Yilmaz Tabel
spellingShingle Gulnur Erdem
Serdal Gungor
Alpay Alkan
Yilmaz Tabel
Magnetic Resonance Imaging Findings of Pediatric Neurobrucellosis
Medicine Science
Neurobrucellosis
magnetic resonance imaging
magnetic resonance spectroscopy
pediatric
author_facet Gulnur Erdem
Serdal Gungor
Alpay Alkan
Yilmaz Tabel
author_sort Gulnur Erdem
title Magnetic Resonance Imaging Findings of Pediatric Neurobrucellosis
title_short Magnetic Resonance Imaging Findings of Pediatric Neurobrucellosis
title_full Magnetic Resonance Imaging Findings of Pediatric Neurobrucellosis
title_fullStr Magnetic Resonance Imaging Findings of Pediatric Neurobrucellosis
title_full_unstemmed Magnetic Resonance Imaging Findings of Pediatric Neurobrucellosis
title_sort magnetic resonance imaging findings of pediatric neurobrucellosis
publisher Society of TURAZ AKADEMI
series Medicine Science
issn 2147-0634
publishDate 2014-12-01
description Brucellosis is an endemic disease often observed in the Mediterranean and Middle East regions. Systemic brucellosis is the most frequent clinical form of this infection; however, hematogenic spread may result in the focal form of the disease. Neurobrucellosis is a rare disease seen in 0, 5-25 % of the adults with systemic brucellosis. 0,8 % of the children affected by systemic brucellosis are reported to have neurological complications. A 16 year old female applied with the complaints of headache, vomiting, bilateral hip and knee pain, and inability to walk. Physical and laboratory examination, brain computed tomography (CT) brain and cervical spinal MRI were carried out as well as the magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) of the lesion areas in the brain. On MRI hydrocephaly in 3rd, 4th and lateral ventricles, atrophic dilatation in bilateral hemispheric cortical sulcuses were seen. On T2W and FLAIR images, hyperintense focal nodular lesions not accompanied by pathological contrast enhancement were detected on parietal subcortical white matter and the periventricular deep white matter. Dural thickening and contrast enhancement on the bilateral parietal region were observed. On cervical spinal MRI, leptomeningeal enhancing was at the level of C1-C7. On MRS applied to lesions in brain (TE 136 and 31 ms), lactate peak at 1.3 ppm was observed. In the differential diagnosis of central nervous system diseases in children living in endemic regions, neurobrucellosis should be kept in mind, though observed rarely. In these cases, the neurological system involvement that cannot be demonstrated via CT, can be shown with MRI effectively. [Med-Science 2014; 3(4.000): 1732-42]
topic Neurobrucellosis
magnetic resonance imaging
magnetic resonance spectroscopy
pediatric
url http://www.ejmanager.com/fulltextpdf.php?mno=160601
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