Metabolic Encephalopathies Flashcards
Encephalopathy, whether caused by metabolic etiology or otherwise, is defined as:
a subacute onset of a confusional state that is marked by fluctuating alterations of consciousness and that progressively worsens if untreated.
The pathophysiology in metabolic encephalopathies involves diverse mechanisms that lead to diffuse involvement of all brain structures. Permanent brain injury can usually be avoided by prompt diagnosis and treatment. The evaluation strategy is first to identify that the patient suffers from a metabolic encephalopathy, and secondly, identify and treat the etiologic diagnosis.
The signs and symptoms of encephalopathy are diverse. Describe them.
There‘s always an acute or subacute alteration of consciousness and mental status with changes in arousal that may be either increased and manifested as delirium or decreased and manifested as lethargy, stupor or coma. The content of thought may also be altered with reduced attention, disorientation, memory impairment, decreased cognitive functions, hallucinations, usually visual, and delusional thinking. There may be seizures, and there is a frequent alteration in respiratory effort that may be decreased or increased.
More signs/symptoms of encephalopathy
The reactivity of the pupil to light is frequently altered. There is usually a symmetric but sluggishly reactive response to light in metabolic encephalopathies. With a few specific exceptions, an asymmetric or a nonreactive pupil response in one or both pupils indicates a structural lesion rather than a metabolic process.
Ocular movements may be conjugate and roving (disconnected from higher centers of volitional control) or worse, dysconjugate and limited in their excursion, or they may be entirely absent.
There is frequent altered motor activity affecting strength, muscle tone, and muscle stretch reflexes, the latter two being increased or decreased depending on the etiology.
Commonly present in metabolic encephalopathy are:
tremor, multifocal myoclonus and asterixis, also known as negative myoclonus.
What is negative myoclonus?
Negative myoclonus involves a sudden lapse in muscle tone best shown by the outstretched arms and hands producing a “liver flap” of the hands.
What is Multifocal myoclonus?
involves the chaotic contraction of small and large groups of muscles to produce sporadic involuntary individual recurrent twitches of a thumb, an eyelid, an arm or even of the entire body when the axial musculature is involved. This is common in hepatic and renal failure, hypoxia and drug overdose.
Encephalopathies may be broadly categorized as either chemical or non-chemical in their pathogenesis. Head trauma, infection, vascular events, and seizures (non-chemical) usually have major focal features but they may present as a diffuse process mimicking a chemical encephalopathy.
An important distinguishing feature of the non-chemical encephalopathies is:
that they more commonly lead to permanent brain injury compared to the chemical encephalopathies. The latter disorders are more likely to be completely reversible if treated appropriately and in a timely manner.
An important clinical point: all encephalopathies present clinically in a similar manner and distinguishing between the various pathogenic etiologies requires a careful history, examination, and an extensive laboratory evaluation.
For example, it is not possible to distinguish between an encephalopathic patient with an underlying cause from a CNS infection versus an abnormality in electrolytes without obtaining the appropriate laboratory tests.
This is a list of the water soluble vitamins that may cause a metabolic encephalopathy.
Other vitamin deficiencies, including vitamins that are water or fat soluble, do cause neurologic disorders but not encephalopathy. For example Vitamin A deficiency leads to night blindness and Vitamin E deficiency leads to myelopathy and polyneuropa
Who commonly gets (B1) Wernicke Korsakoff syndrome?
It is seen primarily in patients with severe alcohol abuse but can complicate any disorder associated with severe nutritional deficiencies (ie. malnutrition due to cancer, bariatric surgery, anoerexia, hyperemesis).
How does Wernicke/Korsakoff Encephalopathy present?
Wernicke patients present with ophthalmoparesis, gait ataxia and a confused state, the so-called classic “Triad” of Wernicke’s encephalopathy.
Korsakoff syndrome, that occurs with and/or follows Wernicke disease, is characterized by amnesia, primarily for recent memories, meaning patients can no longer lay down new memories.
More on WKE presentation
There may be a peripheral neuropathy from chronic alcohol or nutritional deficiency.
What is the prognosis of WKE?
Wernicke signs and symptoms are largely reversible if treated promptly but repeated episodes or inappropriate treatment leads to damage and petechial hemorrhage to several areas of the brain including the dorsomedial thalamus, mamillary bodies, and periaquductal grey.
Brain imaging with MRI can detect these damaged areas antemortem
How is WKE tx?
Treatment with IV thiamine should be prompt and in all instances precede any IV glucose infusion.
The metabolism of glucose requires thiamine and a glucose load in the face of a thiamine deficiency will precipitate brain damage in the areas listed above.
How is WKE diagnosed?
Diagnosis of Wernicke’s is made on clinical grounds. Blood tests for transketolase activity reveal reduced levels but the test is not readily available. The key is to treat patients immediately. In fact, alcoholics and other malnourished patients in the ED, are often supplemented with vitamins, including thiamine, whether they exhibit symptoms of thiamine deficiency or not.
The upper two images present the post-mortem pathology of Wernicke’s disease. Note the periventricular microhemorrhages, resulting in cranial nerve nuclei involvement. There is mammillary body atrophy and hemorrhage in the top right photo and similar pathology in the midbrain periaqueductal gray area in the top left image. The medial dorsal nucleus of the thalamus is also frequently affected.
Note the eye findings with incomplete, asymmetric ocular movement on attempting to look to the right (left lower photo) and even worse on attempting to look to the left (right lower photo) indicating involvement of not only the abducens nuclei but of the PPRF and/or the oculomotor nuclei.
Other presentations for thiamine deficiency include either “wet” or “dry” Beriberi. Describe Wet beriberi. Dry?
Wet: high output cardiac failure
Dry: Polyneuropathy (Lower limbs > upper limbs), Pain & touch decrease/ paresthesia, Loss of ankle & knee reflex (Pathology- axonal degeneration)
Note that niacin deficiency is uncommon but when present may cause:
dementia or polyneuropathy (pathology: diffuse involvement of the CNS and PNS neurons).
Pyridoxine deficiency does not cause encephalopathy but may cause:
a polyneuropathy and seizures particularly in infants.