Background Cerebral microbleeds are increasingly reported in critical ill patients with respiratory failure in need of mechanical ventilation and/or extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). Typically, these critical illness-associated microbleeds involve the juxtacortical white matter and corpus callosum. Recently, this pattern was reported in patients with respiratory failure, suffering from COVID-19. Materials and methods In this retrospective single-center study, we listed patients from March 11, 2020 to September 2, 2020, with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19, critical illness and cerebral microbleeds. Literature research was conducted through a methodical search on Pubmed databases on critical illness-associated microbleeds and cerebral microbleeds described in patients with COVID-19. Results and discussion On 279 COVID-19 admissions, two cases of cerebral microbleeds were detected in critical ill patients with respiratory failure due to COVID-19. Based on review of existing literature critical illness-associated microbleeds tend to predominate in subcortical white matter and corpus callosum. Cerebral microbleeds in patients with COVID-19 tend to follow similar patterns as reported in critical illness-associated microbleeds. Hence, one patient with typical critical illness-associated microbleeds and COVID-19 is reported. However, a new pattern of widespread cortico-juxtacortical microbleeds, predominantly in the anterior vascular territory with relative sparing of deep gray matter, corpus callosum and infratentorial structures is documented in a second case. The possible etiologies of these microbleeds include hypoxia, hemorrhagic diathesis, brain endothelial erythrophagocytosis and/or cytokinopathies. An association with COVID-19 remains to be determined. Conclusion Further systematic investigation of microbleed patterns in patients with neurological impairment and COVID-19 is necessary.
We present a case of a 71-year-old woman with recurrent stroke episodes due to non-bacterial thrombotic endocarditis (NBTE) leading to the diagnosis of an early-stage breast carcinoma. NBTE is associated with a variety of inflammatory states, including malignancy. NBTE presents itself with systemic embolization, mostly stroke. Treatment consists of treating the underlying condition and start of systemic anticoagulation therapy. Cardiac surgery is restricted to highly selected cases, since prognosis usually is limited by the neoplasm, which usually is in an advanced stage at time of diagnosis of NBTE. The malignancy usually is diagnosed prior to NBTE. Cases presenting with NBTE leading to the diagnosis of malignancy, however, are rarely reported. To our knowledge, we present the first case leading to the diagnosis of an early-stage breast carcinoma.
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