Vegetarian diet and excessive tea consumption: a dangerous association?
Fabrizio FiaccoLuca BarbatoMaria Giovanna PecoraroPaola MaggioPublished in: Metabolic brain disease (2016)
Rare metabolic diseases may sometimes arise acutely and endanger human life if not immediately recognized and treated. Marchiafava Bignami disease is an uncommon neurologic disorder described in alcohol abusers and characterized by an acute severe damage of brain white matter. Even more rarely, it has been reported in non-alcohol addicted patients, but never in vegetarian people. This is a case report of a young vegetarian woman, accustomed to drink high amounts of tea, who, three weeks after her first natural childbirth, developed serious motor and cognitive disturbances. A timely brain magnetic resonance (MR) allowed us to identify Marchiafava Bignami disease and she healed few hours after the administration of parenteral steroids and vitamins. We advise to suspect Marchiafava Bignami Disease in all patients presenting with non-obvious acute generalized motor and cognitive disturbances, also if non alcoholics, and to collect the nutritional habits in all patients with suspected symptoms. In these cases a timely brain MRI is warranted, since brain imaging is typical and patients may recover after a prompt treatment.
Keyphrases
- white matter
- magnetic resonance
- end stage renal disease
- resting state
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- contrast enhanced
- multiple sclerosis
- magnetic resonance imaging
- prognostic factors
- functional connectivity
- peritoneal dialysis
- drug induced
- endothelial cells
- oxidative stress
- physical activity
- cerebral ischemia
- weight loss
- body mass index
- mass spectrometry
- blood brain barrier
- photodynamic therapy
- aortic dissection
- depressive symptoms
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- replacement therapy
- gestational age