4.3 Article

Infantile encephalitic beriberi: magnetic resonance imaging findings

Journal

PEDIATRIC RADIOLOGY
Volume 46, Issue 1, Pages 96-103

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00247-015-3437-2

Keywords

Basal ganglia; Infantile encephalitic beriberi; Infants; Magnetic resonance imaging; Magnetic resonance spectroscopy; Thiamine; Wernicke encephalopathy

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Thiamine deficiency in infants is still encountered in developing countries. It may present with acute neurological manifestations of infantile encephalitic beriberi. To review brain MRI findings in infantile encephalitic beriberi from a single institution. A retrospective review of MRI scans in 22 infants with acute-onset beriberi encephalopathy was carried out. Hyperintense lesions on T2-weighted images were seen symmetrically in the putamen in all patients, in the caudate nuclei in 16/22 (73%), the thalami in 7/22 (32%) and the globi pallidi in 3/22 (14%) of the infants. Altered signal intensity lesions in the cerebral cortex were seen in 7/22 (32%). The mammillary bodies were seen in one infant and the periaqueductal gray matter in two. There was restricted diffusion in 14/22 (64%), and 6/8 children with no evidence of restriction had been imaged a parts per thousand yen10 days after presentation. MR spectroscopy showed increased lactate peak in 6/8 infants (75%). Recognition of symmetrical T2-W hyperintense lesions in the basal ganglia with restricted diffusion and prominent lactate peak may allow early diagnosis of encephalitic beriberi in at-risk infants.

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