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Case Reports
Haemorrhagic acute disseminated encephalomyelitis: an unusual case of blindness in an HIV-infected patient.
- Malini Raychaudhuri, Thushan de Silva, Stephen Connor, and Mary Poulton.
- Department of Genito-urinary Medicine, King's College Hospital, London, UK. rcmalini@yahoo.co.uk
- Int J STD AIDS. 2006 Jul 1;17(7):495-7.
AbstractAcute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM) is a monophasic, polysymptomatic, immune-mediated demyelinating disorder involving central nervous system (CNS) white matter. It is usually seen in association with exanthematous viral illnesses, systemic infections or vaccinations. The haemorrhagic form of ADEM is rarer and follows a more fulminant course. We describe a case of haemorrhagic ADEM in an HIV-infected patient presenting solely with acute onset bilateral blindness and normal retina. ADEM was diagnosed from clinical, laboratory and radiological findings. Although ADEM has been seen with HIV seroconversion illness and in chronic infection, the haemorrhagic form has never been reported in association with HIV. Acute onset blindness is extremely rare in HIV-positive patients. A Medline search revealed very few reports. The importance of considering haemorrhagic ADEM as aetiology of blindness in such a scenario is discussed.
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