Probable neurosarcoidosis presenting as acute on chronic otorrhoea: a difficult diagnosis.
Shaan N SomaniAlexander L SchneiderKevin C WelchBorislav A AlexievAkihiro J MatsuokaPublished in: BMJ case reports (2020)
An elderly African American woman presented to our clinic following 9 months of right-sided unilateral headache, otorrhoea and progressive hearing loss. Despite treatment with topical and oral antibiotics, her clinical condition worsened, and imaging showed mastoid coalescence with an associated subgaleal abscess. She underwent right mastoidectomy and was discharged 3 days later on broad-spectrum intravenous antibiotics despite negative operative cultures. Six weeks later, she was hospitalised with diplopia secondary to a right lateral rectus palsy. Imaging showed abscess resolution but progressive bony remodelling and enhancement of the lateral extending into anterior skull base. Chest CT demonstrated upper lobe predominant pulmonary micronodules, and mastoid biopsy on revision surgery was notable for non-caseating granulomas. Further extensive work-up could not identify an alternative cause, and a presumptive diagnosis of neurosarcoidosis was made. The patient was initiated on intravenous steroids, experienced symptomatic improvement and was thereafter transitioned to oral steroid taper on discharge.
Keyphrases
- african american
- minimally invasive
- high resolution
- multiple sclerosis
- high dose
- case report
- hearing loss
- total knee arthroplasty
- pulmonary hypertension
- liver failure
- computed tomography
- primary care
- respiratory failure
- magnetic resonance imaging
- drug induced
- coronary artery bypass
- middle aged
- single molecule
- contrast enhanced
- rare case
- mass spectrometry
- image quality
- fine needle aspiration
- dual energy
- community dwelling
- wound healing
- positron emission tomography
- smoking cessation
- acute coronary syndrome