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Published in: BMC Infectious Diseases 1/2023

Open Access 01-12-2023 | Astrocytoma | Case Report

A clinical case report of Balamuthia granulomatous amoebic encephalitis in a non-immunocompromised patient and literature review

Authors: Jun Liu, Wenjun Zhang, Shanlian Wu, Tianxiang Zeng, Fei Luo, Qiuhua Jiang, Ruijin Yang

Published in: BMC Infectious Diseases | Issue 1/2023

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Abstract

Background

Balamuthia granulomatous amoebic encephalitis (GAE) is a peculiar parasitic infectious disease of the central nervous system, about 39% of the infected Balamuthia GAE patients were found to be immunocompromised and is extremely rare clinically. The presence of trophozoites in diseased tissue is an important basis for pathological diagnosis of GAE. Balamuthia GAE is a rare and highly fatal infection for which there is no effective treatment plan in clinical practice.

Case presentation

This paper reports clinical data from a patient with Balamuthia GAE to improve physician understanding of the disease and diagnostic accuracy of imaging and reduce misdiagnosis. A 61-year-old male poultry farmer presented with moderate swelling pain in the right frontoparietal region without obvious inducement three weeks ago. Head computed tomography(CT) and magnetic resonance imaging(MRI) revealed a space-occupying lesion in the right frontal lobe. Intially clinical imaging diagnosed it as a high-grade astrocytoma. The pathological diagnosis of the lesion was inflammatory granulomatous lesions with extensive necrosis, suggesting amoeba infection. The pathogen detected by metagenomic next-generation sequencing (mNGS) is Balamuthia mandrillaris, the final pathological diagnosis was Balamuthia GAE.

Conclusion

When a head MRI shows irregular or annular enhancement, clinicians should not blindly diagnose common diseases such as brain tumors. Although Balamuthia GAE accounts for only a small proportion of intracranial infections, it should be considered in the differential diagnosis.
Literature
8.
go back to reference Healy JF. Balamuthia amebic encephalitis: radiographic and pathologic findings. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol. 2002 Mar;23(3):486–9. Healy JF. Balamuthia amebic encephalitis: radiographic and pathologic findings. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol. 2002 Mar;23(3):486–9.
Metadata
Title
A clinical case report of Balamuthia granulomatous amoebic encephalitis in a non-immunocompromised patient and literature review
Authors
Jun Liu
Wenjun Zhang
Shanlian Wu
Tianxiang Zeng
Fei Luo
Qiuhua Jiang
Ruijin Yang
Publication date
01-12-2023
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
BMC Infectious Diseases / Issue 1/2023
Electronic ISSN: 1471-2334
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-023-08228-6

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