To assess the clinical and radiologic correlates of frontal intermittent rhythmic delta activity (FIRDA), the authors reviewed the hospital charts of patients whose EEGs depicted this EEG finding, and recorded their past medical and neurologic history, the reason for hospital admission, and their neurologic status both on admission and during EEG recordings. Laboratory results on admission and concomitant to the EEG recording, computed tomography, or MRI findings during hospital admission were also reviewed. Sixty-eight patients were assessed. The gender ratio was 1:1; mean age was 56 years. Chronic disease occurred in 78% of patients, including hypertension (34%), diabetes (32%), and renal failure (18%). On admission, renal failure (n = 34) and hyperglycemia (n = 22) were most prominent. The majority of patients had at least one abnormal laboratory result. Thirty-eight of 51 patients in whom the level of consciousness was stated during EEG were described as awake. More than half of 58 patients whose EEG background activity was stipulated demonstrated diffuse slowing, mostly in the theta range. MRI was abnormal in 15 of 17 patients. Intrahemispheric lesions, particularly ischemic and hemorrhagic, were most common (n = 10), followed by basal ganglia lacunae (n = 4). Computed tomography was abnormal in 29 of 44 patients. Hemispheric pathology, diffuse or localized, occurred in 22 patients. Frontal intermittent rhythmic delta activity is associated with mild to moderate encephalopathy and is detected principally in awake patients. Most patients in this series had chronic systemic illness. Old ischemic structural brain lesions may predispose some patients to develop FIRDA during acute metabolic derangement, such as uremia and hyperglycemia. Frontal intermittent rhythmic delta activity was not associated with EEG epileptiform activity. Deep midline lesions, posterior fossa tumors, and hydrocephalus were not detected in this series of patients with FIRDA.
The mushroom bodies (MBs) are the most prominent structures in adult Drosophila brain. They have been involved in several crucial functions, such as learning and memory, sleep, locomotor activity, and decision making.
The authors present the case of a 27-year-old woman with Erdheim-Chester disease (ECD) and extensive intracranial involvement, in whom the initial diagnosis of ECD was established based on computerized tomography (CT)-guided stereotactic biopsy of a caudate lesion. Erdheim-Chester disease is a rare non-Langerhans cell histiocytosis of unknown origin that is clinically characterized by bone pain, diabetes insipidus, and exophthalmos. The radiological hallmarks of the disease include symmetrical sclerosis of the long bones with epiphysial sparing and increased tracer uptake in lesions seen on scintigraphic imaging. Erdheim-Chester disease is characterized histologically by the presence of infiltrating lipid-laden histiocytes that commonly involve the retroperitoneum, orbits, skin, pericardium, lungs, and long bones. Although the occurrence of diabetes insipidus often precedes the diagnosis of ECD by more than a decade in most patients, magnetic resonance imaging- and CT-documented central nervous system involvement is exceedingly rare. In the setting of neurological involvement, neurosurgical biopsy has been reported seven times in the literature, with only one of these biopsies being the basis for the initial diagnosis of the disease. The authors' case represents only the second time the disease has been diagnosed by means of neurosurgical biopsy, highlighting the diagnostic difficulties that patients with EDC present. Skeletal radiographs were confirmatory in this case and this modality should be emphasized as the simplest and most direct route to the diagnosis. The degree of neurological involvement further distinguishes the case presented from prior reports in the literature. The multiple bilateral intraaxial lesions were intensely enhancing on contrast CT scans, distributed infra- and supratentorially, involving both white and gray matter, and associated with diffuse cerebral edema. The case presented is also remarkable by virtue of the symmetrical involvement of the caudate nuclei, representing the first such example documented in the literature. The diagnosis, treatment, and outcome in this patient are discussed, and a review of the literature is presented.
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