Probable first report of a motor deafferentation syndrome in the Paraguayan War.

Arq Neuropsiquiatr

Universidade Federal Fluminense, Rio de Janeiro RJ, Brazil.

Published: June 2021

The Paraguayan War ended 150 years ago. Back then, there were outbreaks of combatants' limb weakness and tingling related to "palustrian cachexia", not clearly funded at the time on nutritional deficiency, the use of native flora to feed troops, and alcoholism. We report a case of a soldier with ascending paralysis, mental confusion and finally tetraplegia with preserved oculomotricity. This would probably be a case of locked-in syndrome (LIS) due to Gayet-Wernicke's encephalopathy consequent to thiamine deficiency. The role of thiamine in the peripheral or central nervous system expression was shown decades later to be related to poor diet, or use of foods containing thiaminase or thiamine antagonists, worsened by the fact that the bodily stores of thiamine are restricted, and deficits may grow fast.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9394581PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/0004-282X-ANP-2020-0479DOI Listing

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