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Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 7/2012

01-07-2012 | Clinical Practice: Clinical Images

Toxic Encephalopathy

Authors: Abhishek Agarwal, MD, FACP, Tobias Vancil, MD

Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Issue 7/2012

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Excerpt

An unresponsive 37-year-old man was found to have a high anion gap (39 mEq/L) and osmolar gap (170 mOsm/L) metabolic acidosis (pH 6.5). Urine showed needle-shaped crystals. An empty bottle of ethylene glycol was found at his home. FLAIR-weighted magnetic resonance imaging of the brain (Fig. 1) showed symmetrical areas of hyperintensities involving bilateral lentiform nuclei (white arrow) and thalami (black arrow) consistent with a toxic or metabolic encephalopathy. He was intubated and started on bicarbonate drip, fomepizole and hemodialysis. Phenytoin was initiated for seizures. Two weeks later, he developed high-grade fevers with diffuse lymphadenopathy and erythroderma. A presumed diagnosis of phenytoin hypersensitivity was made after a non-diagnostic fine needle aspiration of an axillary lymph node was done. He improved with prednisone and cessation of the phenytoin. Incidentally, the aspirate showed “picket-fence” shaped crystals in a background of lymphocytes under light microscopy (Fig. 2) that were strongly birefringent under polarized light (Fig. 3) consistent with calcium oxalate monohydrate crystals. Calcium oxalate crystals are often found in the urine of patients with oral ethylene glycol ingestion, but finding of crystals in a lymph node has not been previously described in the literature. He made a complete recovery at discharge.
Metadata
Title
Toxic Encephalopathy
Authors
Abhishek Agarwal, MD, FACP
Tobias Vancil, MD
Publication date
01-07-2012
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Issue 7/2012
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Electronic ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-012-2012-x

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