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CPC#6, originally scheduled for Tuesday, February 18, 2003, at 12 Noon in Hurd Hall, was postponed due to the snowstorm that hit the Baltimore area. It is rescheduled for Wednesday, March 19, 2003. CPC #6: Wednesday,
March 19, 2003
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Chief Complaint A 39-year-old female with AIDS who presents with decreased alertness and focal neurologic abnormalities. History of Present Illness The patient is a 39-year-old African-American female with long standing history of AIDS with poor medical compliance. She is known to have a history of crack cocaine and alcohol abuse. She was first tested for HIV after an acute outbreak of genital herpes simplex virus infection in January 2001 and was found to have a CD4 count of 9 and HIV RNA viral load of 326,882 copies/mL. She received care at the Moore Clinic, but she did not start HAART therapy due to continued drug abuse. She had multiple AIDS-associated illnesses in the next year including weight loss, MAI infection, decreased memory, Candida esophagitis, chronic diarrhea, and thrush. In February 2002, after several days of heavy crack cocaine use, she was admitted to an outside hospital for memory loss, decreased responsiveness, and left sided weakness. A head CT scan performed at outside hospital revealed six enhancing lesions, largest in left basal ganglia, while a chest CT scan revealed multiple calcified nodules in the lungs bilaterally. She was noted to have a CD4 count of 3 and HIV RNA viral load greater than 750,000 copies/mL. Sputum cultures were negative. She was placed on dilantin after development of several seizures during hospitalization. She was discharged home to her family six days after admission on dilantin and fluconazole. She was brought to the Moore clinic the following day by family member due to neurologic deterioration. She was unable to provide care for herself, was noted to bite herself and have repeated bouts of incontinence. She was admitted to The Johns Hopkins Hospital. Review of Systems At the time of admission the patient was unable to respond to questions. Past Medical History
Past Surgical History Bilateral partial salpingectomy (1985) Social History The patient lives with her brother and has four children. She is unemployed. She has worked as cashier, telephone solicitor, and janitor in past. She has an 11th grade education. The patient has smoked 5 cigarettes per day for 18 years. She has been drinking several beers a day since her teenage years. She has a 15-year history of crack cocaine use. She denies any IVDA. Family History The patient's father died many years ago from cirrhosis. Her mother died with history of "lung disease". There was no other family history of CNS, cardiac, gastrointestinal, immunologic, or hematologic disease. Physical Exam on Admission
Laboratory Values on Admission Chemistry:
Na+ 132 mEq/L, K+ 5.3 mEq/L, Cl- 93 mEq/L, HCO3- 19 mEq/L, BUN
39 mg/dL, Cr 1.3 mg/dL, Glu 104 mg/dL, Ca2+ 10.1, PO43- 6.5, lactate
1.3 Hospital Course Upon admission the patient was placed on ceftriaxone 2 mg qd for presumed sepsis and started on trimethamine for possible Toxoplasmosis infection. She became more hypoxic and developed increasing oxygen requirements. Radiographic studies, including a brain CT and MRI, were performed. The brain CT (Figure 1) revealed multiple foci of hypodensities with a small hyperdense lesion in the right frontal lobe. The brain MRI (Figures 2A,B,C) revealed multiple masses with a heterogeneous pattern of enhancement, some demonstrating rim enhancement, some with patchy enhancement, and some without enhancement. Masses were identified throughout the infratentorial and supratentorial brain including left cerebellum, bilateral basal ganglia, right thalamus, and right pons. Blood and CSF cultures remained negative but the patient became febrile by third day of admission and developed worsening oxygen requirements as well as developing worsening LFTs, including AST 1471 IU/L, ALT 1055 IU/L, Alk Phos 170 IU/L. Hepatitis viral serologies were all negative. A chest and abdominal CT was performed and revealed multiple bilateral, peripherally based, enhancing lesions in the lungs as well as a filling defect within the right lower lobe pulmonary artery (Figures 3A,B). Trimethoprim was added for possible Pneumocystis carinii infection and patient was started on heparin for probable pulmonary emboli. Due to worsening condition, code status was discussed with family and patient was changed to DNI/DNR. On the seventh day of hospitalization, the patient continued to be febrile and became hypotensive with a Tmax of 40.5°C and systolic blood pressure in the 70-80 range. She developed more labored breathing, became unresponsive without spontaneous movements and expired. Figure 1 Figure 2A Figure 2B Figure 2C Figure 3A Figure 3B What was the
cause of her neurologic condition?
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