Severe osmotic demyelination syndrome with cortical involvement in the context of severe hyponatremia and central diabetes insipidus: an uncommon presentation of an unusual combination.

Autor: Giglio, Andres, Reccius, Andres, Ferre, Andres, Dreyse, Jorge
Zdroj: BMJ Case Reports; Jan2024, Vol. 17 Issue 1, p1-5, 5p
Abstrakt: Background: Osmotic demyelination syndrome (ODS) with cerebral cortical involvement is a rare complication of severe hyponatremia correction. Careful management of hyponatremia is crucial, particularly in patients with risk factors, such as alcohol use disorder and diabetes insipidus. Case: A patient in his 40s with a history of alcohol use disorder and central diabetes insipidus developed ODS after a 24 mEq/L osmolar increase during the treatment of hyponatremia. The patient’s condition progressed into locked-in syndrome and then improved to spastic tetraparesis after cortical basal ganglia ODS improved. Discussion: The differential diagnosis of cortical demyelination includes laminar cortical necrosis, being the interpretation of Apparent Diffusion Coefficient (ADC) MRI sequence is a useful tool. This case underscores the need to investigate and improve diagnosis and treatment strategies in patients with ODS. It also emphasises the significance of careful hyponatremia correction and frequent monitoring, particularly in patients with known risk factors for ODS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index