Bilateral hypogeusia and food aversion due to lacunar infarct in the right dorsomedial pontine tegmentum.
Maria Anna BrandãoThiago ParanhosThomas HummelRicardo de Oliveira-SouzaPublished in: Neurocase (2024)
A 70-year-old right-handed housewife suffered an acute loss of taste, an unpleasant change in the taste of foods and liquids, and a strong aversion to all kinds of food due to a small lacune in the right dorsomedial pontine tegmentum. Eating became so unpleasant that she lost 7 kg in three weeks. Olfaction and the sensibility of the tongue were spared. The right medial longitudinal fascicle, the central tegmental tract, or both, were injured by the tegmental lesion. A discrete right-sided lesion in the upper pontine tegmentum may cause a reversible syndrome consisting of bilateral hypogeusia which is more severe ipsilaterally.
Keyphrases
- prefrontal cortex
- case report
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- drug induced
- human health
- physical activity
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- respiratory failure
- weight loss
- neuropathic pain
- early onset
- cross sectional
- aortic dissection
- hepatitis b virus
- coronary artery disease
- intensive care unit
- acute coronary syndrome
- spinal cord
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- acute respiratory distress syndrome