Referral of a Patient With Ocular Symptoms to the Stroke Clinic: Not Always the Usual Suspect!

Cureus

Radiology, The Royal Wolverhampton NHS Trust, Wolverhampton, GBR.

Published: February 2024

A 77-year-old male attended the stroke clinic as a delayed presentation of a stroke and was initially managed as an occipital stroke. He presented with a gradual decline in visual acuity with an initial suspicion of field deficit over a period of three to four months. He underwent extensive tests including imaging for a confirmatory diagnosis. He had a rapid deterioration of his vision, function, and cognition over a few weeks resulting eventually in death. The case highlights a rare variant of sporadic Creutzfeld-Jakob disease (sCJD), the Heidenhain Variant (HV-CJD). CJD is the commonest of human prion diseases. In HV-CJD, pathologic prions display demyelinating neurotropism for the occipital lobes resulting in visual changes and hallucinations.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10925027PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.53912DOI Listing

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