But I hope the exercise in reasoning was useful for you. I think we demonstrated an approach that was safe, cost-effective, and broad in going through the history and physical exam.
Dr. Gold previously spoke about meningitis (bacterial) and that talk is available here.
In approaching a patient with multiple infarcts we need to consider the following differential:
- Emboli - Arising from the heart or great vessels. One possibility is subacute bacterial endocarditis, particularly given the history of night sweats. I think this patient needs blood cultures drawn with blind subculturing (endocarditis blood cultures) to look for unusual pathogens like brucella. I also think he needs a trans-esophogeal echo looking for a cardiac source including a bubble study to exclude PFO. This can also look at the aortic arch.
- Ischemia -- Either bad luck from uncontrolled risk factors, or genetic stroke syndrome like CADASIL, Fabry's or MELAS, or thrombophilia like antiphospholipid antibody syndrome, ATIII deficiency or hyperhomocysteinemia. I would exclude thrombophilia. As a last resort I would look into genetic testing. Night sweats don't fit with ischemia.
- Vasculitis (Night Sweats would fit with this too)
- Primary:
- Primary CNS angiitis
- GCA/Takayatsu, polyarteritis nodosa (patient has Hep B!)
- Secondary due to:
- Infection:
- Syphilis always needs to be considered in young patients who present with stroke like syndromes.
- HIV can do this -- though he is suppressed.
- CNS TB can cause this also (usually have CNS pleocytosis).
- Fungal infections like cryptococcus can do this too.
- Malignancy -- Angioinvasive lymphoma or lymphovascular lymphamatosis
- Infection:
- Primary:
- Other
I would confirm whether or not he has had a mantoux. He should have one prior to immunosuppression anyways and should be treated for latent TB if this does not represent CNS TB.
I would probably scan his chest/abdomen/pelvis to look for evidence of malignancy, lymphoma or TB disease -- or something safer than the brain to biopsy and make a diagnosis.
Ultimately he may require a stereotactic brain biopsy to exclude TB and make a diagnosis. In a young man, with progressive infarcts and no other cause, I would discuss this with the patient.
TB is treatable, thrombophilia and emboli preventable, and lymphoma may be cured but CADASIL can not so we had better be sure!
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