Introduction: Sensory ganglionopathies are uncommon but potentially very disabling. They have heterogeneous etiologies including autoimmune, paraneoplastic, toxic, and inflammatory although many remain idiopathic despite intensive investigation. Asymmetric sensory loss is relatively common at the onset, but with time, symptoms usually spread to involve all limbs symmetrically.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSuperficial intracranial siderosis is a degenerative condition secondary to recurrent occult subarachnoid hemorrhage. Progressive sensorineural deafness, cerebellar ataxia, and pyramidal signs are well-documented clinical manifestations, but optic neuropathy is not a recognized feature. We describe 2 patients with clinical and electrophysiological evidence of optic nerve/chiasm dysfunction and MRI signal abnormalities consistent with hemosiderin staining of the anterior visual pathway.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 49-year-old white man returned urgently to the UK after spending 3 months in Goa. He had a several week history of vomiting, weight loss, a widespread desquamating skin rash, and symptoms and signs of a progressive painful sensorimotor neuropathy. He had a mild normocytic anaemia and lymphopenia.
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