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Chief
Complaint: History
of Present Illness: On the 1/30/01, she developed tonic-clonic seizures and was brought to an outside hospital. Over 4 hours, she had 4 seizures that were controlled with benzodiazipines and phenytoin. A CT scan showed suggested occipital infarctions bilaterally and periventricular white matter changes (Figure 2). Initial LP showed 1 WBC, Glucose=49 (serum=150 mg/dl), Protein= 23 mg/dl.
Past
Medical History: Family
History: Social
History Allergies Medications Review
of Systems Physical
Exam and Hospital Course She was treated with Solumedrol 1gm x 3 days followed by Prednisone 40 mg/day. Phenytoin was continued and she had no further seizures. Over the next week, she remained oriented to person and place, not time. She also had a persistent headache and fevers from 38-39.50 C. A blood culture grew coagulase negative staphylococcus and enterococcus. Her central line was removed, she was started on Vancomycin and Gentamicin. Echocardiogram was normal and subsequent blood cultures were negative. 10 days after admission she was persistently febrile and had worsening mental status. She was stuporous and not following commands. She also developed a new peripheral L VIIth cranial nerve palsy. Blood and urine cultures were negative. An MRI showed "non-specific T2 abnormalities in the left posterior parietal lobe and basal ganglia" (Figure 3). A chest CT showed a "subtle mixed alveolar/interstitial nodular infiltrate diffusely in both lungs" (Figure 4). A lumbar puncture revealed an elevated opening pressure (not recorded) WBC= 300 (80% polys), RBC= 70, Protein= 145 mg/dl, Glucose= 10 mg/dl. Stains were negative for bacteria, mycobacteria, and fungi.
Over the next three days her mental status and respiratory status worsened. She had a respiratory arrest, was intubated and was placed on mechanical ventilation. Her pupils became fixed and unresponsive. An intraventricular drain was placed for hydrocephalus. Despite aggressive intensive care she expired 2 weeks later with multi-organ failure. Questions to consider:
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