Title of article
Cerebral Toxoplasmosis in a Previously Fit Individual – Pitfalls in Management – A Case Report
Author/Authors
Salleh ، Norly Department of Surgery - Satellite Clinical Research Centre - Hospital Segamat , Zaim ، Rusli Department of Radiology - Hospital Segamat , Udin ، Siti Department of Surgery - Hospital Segamat
From page
284
To page
289
Abstract
Most people with toxoplasmosis infection are asymptomatic. Cerebral toxoplasmosis in HIV patient represents poor prognostic determinant, but treatable if early treatment is initiated. A case of delayed diagnosis of cer ebral toxoplasmosis is presented. A 27-year-old man presented with one-sided facial numbness and treated as Bell’s Palsy. Later he developed slurred speech. Contrast enhanced CT brain showed left frontal temporal hypodense lesion, leptomeningeal enhancement and perilesional oedema. Steroid was started. Four days later, he presented with decreased responsiveness. Retroviral was detected and diagnosis changed to opportunistic brain infection. He died after 3 days. Toxoplasmosis IgG an tibodies turned out positiv e. In diagnosing cerebral toxoplasmosis, clinical presentation and examination are as important as laboratory testing and radiological imaging.
Keywords
Cerebral toxoplasmosis , Toxoplasmosis , Patient , Immunocompromised , Case report
Journal title
Case Reports in Clinical Practice
Journal title
Case Reports in Clinical Practice
Record number
2737905
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