Scedosporium prolificans is an emerging opportunistic fungal agent encountered in severely neutropenic patients. The purpose of this paper is to describe the main cranial CT findings from a retrospective review of six patients (four men and two women, 18-66 years old) afflicted with disseminated infection by S. prolificans with neurological symptoms. They were severely neutropenic and presented with severe respiratory failure and conscience deterioration, with a subsequent 100% mortality. The final diagnosis was established by autopsy (performed in five patients) and blood culture findings. Cranial CT showed multiple low-density lesions in four patients without contrast enhancement located in the basal ganglia and corticomedullary junction. Autopsy findings of these lesions demonstrated necrosis and hyphae proliferation inside brain infarcts. Also, two of the patients had a subarachnoid hemorrhage, but angiography could not be performed. CT and autopsy findings were fairly similar to those encountered in cerebral aspergillosis; however, possibly because of its rapid and fatal evolution, no edema or ring enhancing lesions were encountered. Thus, Scedosporium can be included as a rare but possible cause of invasive fungal disseminated central nervous system infections in severely neutropenic patients.
Neoplasm is an uncommon cause of a parkinsonian syndrome. We report a woman with primary brain B-cell lymphoma presenting as Parkinson's disease. After 1 year of the illness, CT and MRI showed lesions without mass effect in the basal ganglia and corpus callosum. The patient did not respond to levodopa and right cerebellar and brain-stem signs appeared, which prompted further neuroimaging, showing an increase in size of the lesions and a right cerebellar and pontine mass. Stereotactic biopsy of the basal ganglia showed high-grade B-cell lymphoma. Despite the basal ganglia frequently being involved in lymphoma of the brain, presentation with typical or atypical parkinsonism is exceptional.
PFD (Paired Filtration Dialysis) is the only hemodiafiltration (HDF) technique in which the ultrafiltrate (UF) is continuously available not mixed with the dialysate. As with all convective or prevailingly convective techniques, a replacement fluid is necessary in an amount equal to the difference between the UF and the desired weight loss. This replacement fluid (R) must have an adequate electrolytic balance (Na+, Ca++, and buffer), and must be sterile and pyrogen-free. Using an uncoated adsorbent charcoal cartridge, we "regenerated" the UF obtained in PFD, eliminating the small (except for urea, which was later eliminated by diffusion in the dialyzing section of the PFD system) and the medium-to-large molecules (vit B12 and myoglobin in vitro and beta-2-microglobulin (B2m) and (hANP) in vivo), but not the electrolytes and the endogenous bicarbonate, so as to verify its possible use as R. This technique, experimentally performed in 12 patients under HDF treatment with standard PFD, with a total mean UF of 9650 +/- 875 ml and the use of 130 g of uncoated charcoal, produced a solution with the following composition: Na+ 135.4 +/- 2.4 mmol/l, K+ 3.4 +/- 1.23 mmol/l, Ca++ 1.18 +/- 0.14 mmol/l, HCO3- 26.7 +/- 2.3 mmol/l, phosphates 2.88 +/- 0.81 mg/dl, urea 63 +/- 14 mg/dl, creatinine 0.08 +/- 0.02 mg/dl, uric acid 0.05 +/- 0.0 mg/dl, beta-2 microglobulin 0.5 +/- 0.5 mg/l, and hANP 4.15 +/- 5 pg/l.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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