Clinical Reasoning: A 55-Year-Old Woman With Recurrent Episodes of Aphasia and Vision Changes.
Valerie JeanneretStewart NeillJames G GreeneOlivia GrooverCarlos S KasePublished in: Neurology (2021)
A 55-year-old woman presented with recurrent episodes of headache, vision changes, and language disturbances. Brain MRI showed multifocal white matter lesions, microhemorrhages, and enlarged perivascular spaces. After an extensive and unrevealing workup, she underwent a biopsy of brain and meninges that revealed thick and hyalinized leptomeningeal and cortical vessel walls that were strongly positive for β-amyloid by immunohistochemical staining, suggestive of cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA). CAA can present as a spectrum of inflammatory responses to the deposition of amyloid-β in the vessel walls. Her clinical presentation, radiologic, and histopathologic findings supported a diagnosis of probable CAA-related inflammation (CAA-ri). Although an uncommon entity, it is important to recognize it because most patients respond to immunosuppressive therapy.
Keyphrases
- white matter
- end stage renal disease
- resting state
- ejection fraction
- multiple sclerosis
- cerebral ischemia
- newly diagnosed
- magnetic resonance imaging
- oxidative stress
- chronic kidney disease
- prognostic factors
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- autism spectrum disorder
- functional connectivity
- contrast enhanced
- stem cells
- ultrasound guided
- patient reported
- cerebral blood flow