Teaching NeuroImages: The dentate sign in subacute cerebellar ataxia
Metronidazole neurotoxicity
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A 79-year-old woman developed infectious periaortitis after an abdominal aortic aneurysm repair. A month later, she exhibited vertigo, dysarthria, and unsteady gait, progressing to inability to stand, painful paresthesia, and disorientation. Her examination showed dysmetria, dysdiadochokinesia, and severe cerebellar ataxia. She underwent extensive laboratory investigations, including autoimmune and paraneoplastic panels. Prominent dentate hyperintensity on T2-weighted and fluid-attenuated inversion recovery sequences had been overlooked (figure). The cerebellar syndrome, and the abnormal dentate signal, resolved within 15 days from discontinuing metronidazole. Besides encephalopathy and polyneuropathy, metronidazole can induce subacute cerebellar ataxia by selectively affecting the dentate nucleus.1,2 Recognizing this imaging hallmark identifies a reversible iatrogenic complication and prevents unnecessary testing.
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Republished from Neurology® 2020;94:e878-e879. doi:10.1212/WNL.0000000000009006
Teaching slides links.lww.com/WNL/B46
- © 2020 American Academy of Neurology
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