Presentation
Recent history of upper respiratory tract infection, now presenting with convulsions and disturbed conscious level.
Patient Data
Bilateral thalamic swelling with areas of high T2W, heterogeneous and predominately high signal on T1W likely of haemorrhage, with restricted diffusion.
Other areas of similar abnormal signal are alsoseen at the left midbrain, splenium of the corpus callosum, bilateral frontal and parietal subcortical regions.
Regressive course of the size of the previously noted bilateral thalamic and cerebral cortical and subcortical patchy areas of altered MRI signal and the surrounding oedema. The lesions show facilitated diffusion at the current study.
Case Discussion
The bilateral thalamic and cerebral lesions are typical of acute necrotising encephalitis of childhood. The patient received medical treatment, mainly IV immunoglobulin, and showed significant regression of the disease clinically and on imaging .
Other differential diagnoses could be acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM), which was excluded clinically by a short time gap (5 days) between upper respiratory tract infection and neurological manifestations. Also viral encephalitis which was excluded by lumbar puncture and culture.