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贵州省人民医院分院,贵州省骨科医院童年离别焦虑障碍专家

简介:

北京积水潭医院贵州医院,是贵州省第一家落地并运营的国家区域医疗中心,为三级公立医院,是贵州省卫生健康委直属的正处级事业单位。以实力担重任,树发展里程碑。2022年10月,贵州省首家国家区域医疗中心正式获批并落地运营,由北京积水潭医院与贵州省人民政府共建,通过“京黔”同质化、一体化管理,建设一流国家区域医疗中心、服务全国百姓。输出医院北京积水潭医院是以骨科为重点的三级甲等综合医院,实力强劲,享誉中外,拥有国家临床重点专科4个,连续13年获“复旦版”全国医院排行榜骨科第一名。北京积水潭医院人才济济,有中国工程院院士1人、国务院政府特殊津贴专家5人、省部级突出贡献专家3人、国家级百千万人才1人、北京学者2人、青年北京学者1人。依托医院贵州省骨科医院是三级甲等骨科专科医院。近年来,发展迅速,综合实力突出,拥有国家临床重点专科及培育项目2个、省级重点专科项目7个、共有12个亚学科、设有35个临床科室、21个病区,是贵州省骨科龙头医院。同时,作为贵州省唯一拥有“贵州省康复医学中心”名片的医院,建有目前国内单体面积最大、功能齐全、环境优美的现代康复大厅。扩规模、强内涵、提能力、创一流。医院与北京积水潭医院建立互联互通工作机制,实行双向转诊机制,实现检验检查结果互认,达成优质医疗资源共用共享。通过充分发挥北京积水潭医院优势,全面提升贵州省骨科系统疾病整体救治水平和疑难、急危重症救治能力,大幅减少跨省就医的比例。聚人才合力筑强院之基功以才成,业由才广。依托于全国骨科专业排名第一的北京积水潭医院,借力于其庞大的专家团队,医院高水平人才队伍总量持续扩大。目前,北京积水潭医院已先后派驻34名专家至贵州医院开展工作,后续将派驻更多国内知名专家进驻贵州医院领衔工作。同时将以“京招黔用”方式为贵州医院招聘博士等优秀高层次人才。医院现有在职员工1327人,高级职称162人,中级职称215人;高学历人才255名,其中博士及在读博士40人,硕士研究生230人。医院医务人员在省内外各学术委员会任职达277人次。国家级各专业委员会常委4人、委员35人;省级各专业委员会任职95人、主委及副主委11人;三级教授1人,贵州省千层次人才1人,贵州省百优医生5人、百优护士6人,贵州省五一劳动奖章2人,贵州省道德模范1人。抓学科建设助医院腾飞学科建设既是医院发展的制高点,也是提升医疗实力的着力点。医院采用“一院两区”的新型运营管理模式。两院区总建筑面积共约16.5万㎡,门诊用房面积约4.8万㎡,住院用房面积达6万㎡,配有8000㎡康复花园,有编制床位1000张,共开设临床科室35个,医技科室11个。白云院区位于贵阳市白云区思贤街206号,南明院区位于贵阳市南明区沙冲南路123号。医院学科特色显著,临床诊疗水平突出。诊疗范围涵盖以骨科为中心的所有骨病项目,白云院区开设下肢创伤科、骨盆科、骨感染科、上肢创伤科、修复重建科、足踝科(糖尿病足特色门诊)、小儿骨科、关节科、脊柱科、运动医学科、骨内科、疼痛科、康复科、中医科、神经科、心血管科、呼吸科、消化科、肾内科、内分泌科、外科、麻醉科、急诊科、重症医学科、睡眠中心、血透室、健康管理中心、临床营养科。南明院区开设骨外科、骨内科、疼痛科、内科、骨科门诊治疗中心。白云院区特设:贵州省康复医学中心(现代康复中心、中医康复厅)、老年髋部骨折诊疗中心。北京积水潭专家入驻以来,医院引入大量新技术,综合实力及核心竞争力大幅提升,门诊量2023年1月至2月同比增长52.91%,门急诊量同比单月增长29.59%;手术量2023年1月至2月同比增长18.77%,手术台次同比单月最高增长41.09%。目前已开展新技术:小儿骨科16项、创伤骨科10项、运动医学科10项、脊柱外科7项、手外科17项、矫形骨科5项、足踝外科6项、心内科8项、胸外科10项、泌尿外科1项、神经外科1项、麻醉科8项、急诊科2项、放射科3项、检验科1项,共开展新技术105项,填补了4项国内空白、12项西南空白、25项省内空白及64项院内空白。携科技攀登创智慧医院科技引领发展,创新赋能未来。医院全力打造“互联网+医院”,投入巨额资金,引入先进设备,配备高端系统,建设信息化病房。目前已引入自动取药系统、物联网、5G及远程医疗、临床VR技术、院区人脸识别监控及远程医疗设备。医院共配有医疗设备4000余台,其中千万级以上大型设备10台,百万级以上大型设备91台。配备高端PRP(富血小板血浆)实验室、GE的64排CT机、健康风险评估系统、VR情景模拟训练系统、三维步态分析系统、上下肢康复机器人、外骨骼机器人训练系统、神经肌肉控制训练与评估系统、全身姿态评估与训练系统、飞利浦3.0T医用磁共振成像系统、西门子64排128层CT、Hologic双能X射线骨密度仪、综合快速发药系统、气动物流系统、DIH智能药品管理系统、西门子全自动生化免疫检测流水线,希森美康全自动血细胞分析流水线、GELOGIQE11、飞利浦EPIQ7C、奥林巴斯电子支气管镜等,达国内先进水平。十年树木,百年树人。医院与北京积水潭医院本部、北京积水潭中山骨科医院形成联动,定期开展联合查房、学术交流、手术演示等学术活动,促进医院医疗技术水平持续提高。同时,医院与北京积水潭医院开展科研合作,每年派出30—50人至总院进行为期3—6个月的进修培训,培养高水平科研团队。医院临床试验机构2017年成立至今,外科、骨内科、疼痛科、麻醉科、内科五个专业顺利通过CFDA认证,获得国家药物临床试验机构资格,承接临床试验8项。全院共发表论文2142篇,其中SCI68篇,核心期刊166篇。取得专利394项,实现专利成果转化1项。获纵向科研课题立项127项。屡获殊荣载誉前行五十三年,栉风沐雨、激流勇进,医院经历了更名、搬迁、挂牌,从大山中的“三线建设”后勤保障医院成长为“精综合、强专科”的国家区域医疗中心。医院先后荣获贵州省“文明单位”、“职工模范之家”、“三八红旗集体”、“省级青年文明号”、“百姓最满意医院”等称号。2018年,全国公立医院满意度调查中,住院患者满意度和职工满意度在委直属医院排名第一。2019年以来,三级公立医院绩效考核成绩连续三年保持在全国前10%,获评国家监测指标A等级。多次在全国公立医院满意度调查中,门诊满意度、住院患者满意度分别位列委直属医院前列。2021年,高质量发展总体评分排全省第一位。“镁光灯下写历史,业绩已成昨日花。”昂首迈步新征程,砥砺奋进新时代。医院正在积极创建国家区域医疗实验中心,建设细胞实验室平台、基因实验室平台、蛋白实验室平台、质谱实验室平台等前沿性科研平台,力争为今后的科研搭建更好的平台,在急危重症、放射与治疗、糖尿病与代谢疾病等临床医学研究中取得突破。许多精神病人有妄想、幻觉、错觉、情感障碍、哭笑无常、自言自语、行为怪异、意志减退,绝大多数病人缺乏自知力,不承认自己有病,不良的家庭环境是品行障碍的重要病因。另外,经常接触不健康的媒体宣传,以及接受不正确思想教育,心理,设法脱离致病环境,消除与发病有关的因素,加强精神治疗。保持心理平衡,增强战胜各种困难的信心和勇气,有利于预防各种反应性精神障碍。根据临床症状选用舒眠解郁组合阶梯式疗法,精神障碍涉及精神活动的各个方面,通过人的外显行为如仪表、动作、言谈举止、神态表情及书写内容等表现,以清淡为主,平常要多注意多吃蔬果,合理搭配膳食,注意营养充足。同时要避免刺激性的食物,不要吃燥热的食物,避免引起肝火上亢。,品行障碍目前还没有什么特异性的辅助检查方式,针对该病只能通过典型的临床表现和心理咨询来判断。,。

朱坤智 主治医师

擅长骨与关节病的治疗,股骨颈骨折,股骨粗隆间骨折,老年髋部骨折,股骨头坏死,类风湿性关节炎、膝关节骨性关节炎,髋关节发育不良,髋关节炎,腕、肩、肘、膝关节损伤、腰椎间盘突出症,痛风性关节炎的治疗。

好评 100%
接诊量 14
平均等待 -
擅长:擅长骨与关节病的治疗,股骨颈骨折,股骨粗隆间骨折,老年髋部骨折,股骨头坏死,类风湿性关节炎、膝关节骨性关节炎,髋关节发育不良,髋关节炎,腕、肩、肘、膝关节损伤、腰椎间盘突出症,痛风性关节炎的治疗。
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袁云飞 主治医师

中西医结合诊治脊柱退行性疾病、关节炎、肩周炎、骨质疏松、带状疱疹、风湿免疫系统疾病等。

好评 -
接诊量 -
平均等待 -
擅长:中西医结合诊治脊柱退行性疾病、关节炎、肩周炎、骨质疏松、带状疱疹、风湿免疫系统疾病等。
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何莎 主治医师

擅长神经系统疾病的诊断及治疗,擅长脑梗死,脑出血,蛛网膜下腔出血疾病诊断,慢病管理及康复治疗指导。擅长偏头痛,头晕,帕金森病,多发性硬化等神经系统疾病的诊断及治疗。擅长颈椎病,腰椎间盘突出等骨关节疾病的诊断及治疗

好评 100%
接诊量 2
平均等待 -
擅长:擅长神经系统疾病的诊断及治疗,擅长脑梗死,脑出血,蛛网膜下腔出血疾病诊断,慢病管理及康复治疗指导。擅长偏头痛,头晕,帕金森病,多发性硬化等神经系统疾病的诊断及治疗。擅长颈椎病,腰椎间盘突出等骨关节疾病的诊断及治疗
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邱智 主治医师

骨科疾病运动预防、保守治疗及术后康复。运动损伤评估与保守治疗。青少年脊柱侧弯筛查和保守治疗。老年运动功能障碍康复。中枢神经及周围神经疾病康复。

好评 100%
接诊量 2
平均等待 -
擅长:骨科疾病运动预防、保守治疗及术后康复。运动损伤评估与保守治疗。青少年脊柱侧弯筛查和保守治疗。老年运动功能障碍康复。中枢神经及周围神经疾病康复。
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钟璟 主治医师

擅长消化内科专业,尤其消化内镜方面

好评 100%
接诊量 29
平均等待 -
擅长:擅长消化内科专业,尤其消化内镜方面
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莫安华 副主任医师

擅长儿童及青少年各个部位创伤骨折的诊断及微创治疗,儿童及青少年髋关节疾病(先天性髋关节脱位、髋关节发育不良及后遗畸形、儿童股骨头缺血坏死等)的个性化治疗,儿童急慢性骨髓炎及骨病(骨囊肿、骨软骨瘤、骨纤维异常增殖症、代谢性佝偻病等)的诊治,以及各种因素肢体畸形(创伤后遗肢体畸形与骨不连、成骨不全、肢体发育不良、特发性膝内外翻等)的矫正和肢体重建等。

好评 -
接诊量 -
平均等待 -
擅长:擅长儿童及青少年各个部位创伤骨折的诊断及微创治疗,儿童及青少年髋关节疾病(先天性髋关节脱位、髋关节发育不良及后遗畸形、儿童股骨头缺血坏死等)的个性化治疗,儿童急慢性骨髓炎及骨病(骨囊肿、骨软骨瘤、骨纤维异常增殖症、代谢性佝偻病等)的诊治,以及各种因素肢体畸形(创伤后遗肢体畸形与骨不连、成骨不全、肢体发育不良、特发性膝内外翻等)的矫正和肢体重建等。
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患友问诊

孩子异常行为咨询,涉及注意缺陷多动障碍、情绪问题及分离焦虑等。患者男性7岁
57
2024-10-31 17:35:04
我想开一份分离焦虑症的处方,但没有纸质处方,能否在线开具?
55
2024-10-31 17:35:04
担心亲人离开,有焦虑症状,家族中有亲人去世的经历。患者女性22岁
41
2024-10-31 17:35:04
孩子对奶奶比对妈妈亲近,担心孩子以后不跟我亲近。患者女性30岁
4
2024-10-31 17:35:04
4岁半男孩不适应新环境,换新老师或培训班就哭闹,喜欢画画和乐高。有分离焦虑现象。患者男性4岁
33
2024-10-31 17:35:04
14个月宝宝夜间频繁醒来,无其他明显症状,考虑积食或分离焦虑。
63
2024-10-31 17:35:04
女儿十个月大,因工作原因放在姥姥家,非常想女儿,心理难受,担心有病。患者男性34岁
24
2024-10-31 17:35:04
孩子短暂离开视线后,怀疑孩子被人换掉,持续焦虑。患者女性33岁
46
2024-10-31 17:35:04
儿童面临分离焦虑,表现为分开时会大哭大叫,缺乏安全感。如何帮助孩子适应分离并顺利过渡到小学成为关注焦点。患者女性6岁
32
2024-10-31 17:35:04
7岁儿童出现不去学校,焦虑情绪,疑似分离焦虑。患者男性8岁
20
2024-10-31 17:35:04

科普文章

#焦虑[回避]型人格障碍#童年离别焦虑障碍
8

视频简介

 

作者:吉林省脑科医院 精神科 主任医师 刘臣

 

儿童与其依恋对象分离时,产生过度的焦虑至少有下列三项,过分担心依恋对象,可能遇到伤害或害怕依恋对象一去不复返,过分担心自己会走失会被绑架,被杀害或者住院,以至于与依恋对象离别,因不愿意离开依恋对象,而不想上学或者拒绝上学,非常害怕一个人独处,或没有依恋对象的陪同,绝不外出,宁愿在家待着。没有依恋对象在旁边时,不愿意或者拒绝上床就寝,反复做噩梦,内容与离别有关,以至于夜间多次惊醒与依恋对象分离前过分担心,分离时和分离后出现过度的情绪反应。

孩子从出生一直都是我自己带着,这不是接着要上幼儿园了,有点意识到不对,孩子太黏我了,形影不离,这要是不注意孩子上幼儿园肯定不适应。那孩子也是老遭罪了,没有安全感呀!

“妈妈,妈妈, 妈妈。”只要离开一分钟,宝宝就开始连环呼叫 。

你家宝宝有这种粘宝宝综合症吗?粘宝宝综合症也被称为幼儿分离焦虑。一旦产生会让你和宝宝都感到不安 ,还可能会影响到宝宝上幼儿园,让我们一起来为宝宝排忧解难,健康应对分离焦虑!

“我不要和妈妈分开 ”

让宝宝快速适应分开的小妙招 。

1,从短暂的分离开始,锻炼把宝宝留给他们认识的人,爸爸妈妈这可以出去待几分钟 。

2,试着向躲猫猫一样,让你和宝宝分开,把这个事情变成一个游戏 。

3,当你不在的时候给你的宝宝一条围巾或者一个带有你气味的玩具。

4,爸爸妈妈要把自己积极阳光的一面展现给宝宝,宝宝是能感受到你的焦虑和苦脑的。

5,如果你的宝宝和别人在一起时还是不开心或者哭闹,可以向医生寻求关于分离焦虑的建议,切记这个时候就不要强迫宝宝适应了 。

注意!这些情况下不要离开宝宝 :

宝宝饿了、累了或感觉不舒服的时候,或者任何你觉得他们真的需要你的时候,这个时候千万不要离开他们,宝宝出生就和爸爸妈妈生活在一起 所以依赖感会很强,这个阶段爸爸妈妈一定要有耐心,才能更好的缓解宝宝分离焦虑 。

关注营养 关爱健康 健康一生相随。

感谢平台让我们相遇,感谢有您的关注、转发、点赞和评论,更多营养和教育问题可以与我交流。让育儿更轻松,让教育更有效 ,我将继续带来更多精彩内容。

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#童年离别焦虑障碍
5

患有分离性焦虑障碍的儿童会对分离感到持续的慌张和恐惧。很多儿童深受以下症状的困扰:

  • 害怕糟糕的事情发生在自己爱的人身上。这些孩子最常见的一种恐惧是,有害的事情在他们不在的时候会发生在他们爱的人身上。例如,一个儿童会一直担心他的父母生病或受伤。
  • 担心一些不可预知的事情会造成持续的分离。你的孩子可能会担心,一旦与你分开,某些事就会发生,这会让你和他一直分开。例如,他们会担心你被绑架或者走丢。
  • 拒绝去上学。患有分离性焦虑障碍的孩子会对学校有一种无理由的害怕,会不择手段逃避学校而呆在家里。
  • 拒绝睡觉。分离性焦虑障碍会导致儿童失眠,这是因为他们害怕一个人时的孤单或因分离造成的梦魇。
  • 躯体症状,如头痛、胃痛。分离的时候或之前,患有分离性焦虑障碍的儿童会感到躯体上的不适,而且这些不适是多变的。
  • 粘着自己的照育者。如果你试图离开时,你的孩子会想方设法粘着你,或是拉住你的胳膊或腿以阻止你离开。
#童年离别焦虑障碍#其他特指的焦虑障碍#因害怕阴茎缩回腹部导致死亡所致焦虑#童年离别焦虑障碍
9

分离焦虑忌讳的处理方式分离焦虑( Dissociativeanxiety )是指婴幼儿因与亲入分离而引起的焦虑、不安、或不愉快的情绪反应,又称离别焦虑。即婴幼儿 1、偷偷走这个场景很常见,家里人一边用玩具,吃的,各种东西吸引宝宝于某个人产生亲密的情感结系后,又要与之分离时,产生的伤心、痛苦,以表示拒绝分离.是婴幼儿焦虑症的一种类型,多发病于学龄前注意力,一边挤眉弄眼示意妈妈快走。或者干脆把宝宝带到另一个房期间,不让他看到妈妈离开不辞而别,最不可取。妈妈刚刚还在,不知道什么时候突然就不许多的宝宝在离开父母的时候,或多或少的会有一点分离焦虑的情况出现。这边脑康君就教给爸爸妈妈一些应对分离焦虑的方法,让见了,宝宝该多慌张啊。

爸爸妈妈成长起来他会因此更加恐慌,更粘妈妈,即使和妈妈在一起也无法安心对心理成长有很大影响。

父母如何应对分离焦虑 2、妈妈有情绪 1、和孩子说再见的时候语气要欢快妈妈也有分离焦虑,尤其是一直自己带,分开真的会担心这样给孩子传达的信息是你很信任那个代替你照顾他/她的人但你的负面情绪会加重宝宝的痛苦,你一皱眉,一掉泪,恋恋不没什么大不了的舍依依惜别,宝宝不伤心也变伤心了。所有,控制住,装也要装得不要把担心放在脸上,反复叮嘱,语气焦虑,要知道孩子对主要开心心出家门。

照料者(通常是妈妈)的情绪最敏感,你的焦虑担心会影响孩子,让 3、批评宝宝他/她觉得你要把他/她留在一个很恐怖的地方,一个连妈妈都不经历分离焦虑的过程中,宝宝可能会出现很多“反常”的情绪和放心的地方行为。比如:

  • 回家后高质量陪伴之前都能睡整觉了,现在哭着闹着喝夜奶;之前睡小床,现在哭这里高质量的陪伴,是指要全身心投入到孩子的游戏和世界中,
  • 着闹着要跟妈妈睡;之前自己睡,现在不抱不睡,落地醒,挨床炸;
  • 而不是只是拿着手机坐在孩子的旁边。最好多一些户外亲子活动,哪之前很乖,现在却变得牌气暴躁,乱扔东西怕和孩子在草地上打几个滚,扔扔球都能让孩子很开心这些“退化”都是正常的。虽然会给妈妈和家人带来很多困扰 3、提前告诉孩子你什么时候会接她,并坚决按时执行但别因此过分责怪宝宝,“你怎么回事啊”,“你再这样妈妈不回来时龄小的孩子可能还不了解几点钟的概念,可以给他们具体的描了”,责备会让分离焦虑持续的时间更加延长,威胁也会让问题变得分离焦虑的问题可大可小,处理好了对宝宝心理以后的发展也述。例如,“等你在幼儿园午睡起来以后,妈妈就会来接你了”,“你更加严重是有一定的帮助的。宝宝现在的时间段正是心理发育的重要阶段,不和奶奶在家,等吃午饭的时候妈妈就回来了”等。

能因为分离焦虑而影的宝未来的发展,所以各位管爸们视起来这个分离焦虑吧

#新生儿腹胀#新生儿呼吸窘迫综合征#新生儿支气管肺炎#童年离别焦虑障碍
6

分离焦虑与陌生人焦虑是指婴儿在离开母亲,遭遇陌生人和陌生环境的情况下,产生惊恐、躲避反应。这时会出现恐惧警觉行为,痛苦、愤怒等情绪,以及求助、反抗、警惕、谨慎等行为。

婴儿的分离焦虑会经历以下几个过程:

  • 最初阶段:这个阶段的婴儿啼哭、悲伤,呼唤妈妈、拒绝陌生人以及痛苦的求助,愤怒的抗议。
  • 第二阶段:这个阶段的婴儿在无人理睬、无法摆脱陌生环境、无从改善困境的情况下,渴求妈妈的希望破灭,感到失望,便减少啼哭,出现感情冷漠。
  • 第三阶段:这个阶段的婴儿在无能为力、无可奈何之下,开始寻求可亲近的陌生人,表现出似乎超脱分离焦虑困扰的状态,企图去适应新的环境。

婴儿处于分离焦虑阶段时,其身心都会受到影响,他们睡眠不好,易受惊扰,食欲不良,甚至出现行为问题。如果这种状态过重、过长会影响婴儿的智力、个性和社会适应性的发展,应当引起家长们的重视。

以下内容来源于新英格兰医学杂志。

Presentation of Case

Dr. Carrie Chui (Neurology): A 79-year-old man was admitted to this hospital because of involuntary movements on the left side and transient unresponsiveness.
The patient had been in his usual state of health until 9 months before admission, when involuntary movements of the left shoulder and left side of the face developed. The movements were described by the patient as twitching, were not associated with a change in the level of consciousness, and resolved after 1 to 2 minutes. During the next 6 months, the patient had similar episodes approximately once per month, but the episodes increased in duration, lasting 5 to 6 minutes.
Three months before admission, the episodes of involuntary movements increased in frequency, and the patient was evaluated by his primary care physician. The physical examination was normal. Results of kidney-function tests were normal, as were blood levels of glucose and electrolytes, except for the sodium level, which was 129 mmol per liter (reference range, 135 to 145). There was a history of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion, and the sodium level was similar to levels obtained during the past 4 years. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the head (Figure 1A), performed before and after the administration of intravenous contrast material, revealed a focus of enhancement in the right middle frontal gyrus that was thought to be a small vascular anomaly. Electroencephalography (EEG), performed with the patient in awake and drowsy states, revealed rare, brief, focal slowing in the left temporal lobe during drowsiness; no epileptiform abnormalities were present.
Figure 1
MRI of the Head and CT Angiogram of the Head and Neck.
Two months before admission, the patient was evaluated in the epilepsy clinic affiliated with this hospital. He reported that the episodes of involuntary movements had increased in both frequency and duration, occurring once or twice per day and lasting approximately 10 minutes. Episodes began with tingling and numbness in the left leg that prompted the patient to voluntarily stomp the left foot to relieve the uncomfortable sensation. Then, the patient had involuntary movements that he described as an uncontrollable invisible force moving the left leg and arm, with hyperextension of the arm backward and pronation of the wrist. There was associated numbness in the distal portions of the left third, fourth, and fifth fingers and involuntary movement of the left cheek. No prodromal symptoms occurred. The patient had awareness during the episodes, and after the episodes, he felt fatigued but had a normal level of consciousness, without confusion. The examination in the epilepsy clinic was normal. A diagnosis of seizure disorder was considered, and treatment with levetiracetam was started.
Three weeks before admission, the patient was again evaluated in the epilepsy clinic. He reported that the episodes of involuntary movements still occurred on a daily basis but had decreased in duration and involved only the left leg, without abnormal movements of the arm or face. Dizziness, headache, and weakness had developed and were attributed to the use of levetiracetam. The patient’s family had recorded a video of one of the episodes of involuntary movements. After reviewing the video, the patient’s neurologist thought that the episodes were less likely to be caused by seizures and more consistent with choreoathetoid movements. Cross-tapering of medications — with the simultaneous administration of levetiracetam in decreasing doses and clobazam in increasing doses — was initiated, and the patient was referred to the movement disorders clinic affiliated with this hospital.
On the morning of admission, an episode of involuntary movements of the left leg and left shoulder occurred and persisted for 1 hour. Several hours after the symptoms abated, the patient’s wife found the patient to be unresponsive; he was sitting in a chair. Emergency medical services were called, and when they arrived, the patient was responsive. The fingerstick blood glucose level was 180 mg per deciliter (10.0 mmol per liter) and the blood pressure 110/80 mm Hg. The patient was transported to the emergency department of this hospital for further evaluation.
In the emergency department, the patient reported dysuria and increased urinary frequency. The patient’s daughter noted that he had been more anxious during the past 3 years and occasionally had trouble with memory. Other medical history included Barrett’s esophagus, benign prostatic hypertrophy, chronic hepatitis B virus infection, eczema, gastroesophageal reflux disease, hypertension, nonischemic cardiomyopathy, and osteoporosis. There was no history of head trauma or extended loss of consciousness. Medications included aspirin, atorvastatin, doxazosin, finasteride, omeprazole, metoprolol, sacubitril, and valsartan. There were no known drug allergies. The patient was a lifelong nonsmoker and drank alcohol rarely; he did not use illicit drugs. His mother had had gastric cancer, and his sister had had esophageal cancer; there was no family history of seizures.
On examination, the temporal temperature was 36.8°C, the blood pressure 152/97 mm Hg, the pulse 65 beats per minute, the respiratory rate 16 breaths per minute, and the oxygen saturation 96% while the patient was breathing ambient air. The body-mass index (the weight in kilograms divided by the square of the height in meters) was 21.7. The blood pressure decreased to 130/63 mm Hg with standing. The patient was alert and interactive. The lower jaw was held to the left, but the nasolabial folds and smile were symmetric with activation. There were nonrhythmic, nonstereotyped, writhing movements of the left arm. Tone was normal, and strength was assessed as 5 out of 5 in the arms and legs. Results of liver-function and kidney-function tests were normal, as were blood levels of glucose and electrolytes, except for the sodium level, which was 125 mmol per liter. The lactate level was 2.1 mmol per liter (19 mg per deciliter; reference range, 0.5 to 2.0 mmol per liter [5 to 18 mg per deciliter]). The urinalysis was normal. Intravenous fluids were administered. Imaging studies were obtained.
Dr. Rajiv Gupta: Computed tomographic (CT) angiography of the head and neck (Figure 1B) revealed extensively calcified plaque with severe stenosis of the distal right common carotid artery (CCA), extending into the proximal right internal carotid artery (ICA), as well as stenosis of the right and left paraclinoid ICAs and the left vertebral artery at its origin. There was no vascular abnormality on the CT angiogram that corresponded to the abnormality in the right middle frontal gyrus seen on the previous MRI.
Dr. Chui: The patient was admitted to the hospital. On the second hospital day, the sodium level had increased to 130 mmol per liter, and the lactate level was normal. Additional imaging studies were obtained.
Dr. Gupta: MRI of the head showed no evidence of acute infarction. The focus of enhancement in the right frontal lobe that had been noted previously was not seen on the current MRI.
Dr. Chui: Blood levels of thyrotropin, cobalamin, and glycated hemoglobin and results of coagulation tests were normal. Screening tests for Lyme disease, tuberculosis, and syphilis were negative, as were tests for antibodies to cardiolipin and β2-glycoprotein. A test for antinuclear antibodies was positive, at a titer of 1:160 in a homogeneous pattern. During a physical therapy session, the patient had abnormal movements of the left leg, left arm, and left side of the face. The abnormal movements diminished when the patient used distraction techniques, such as thigh tapping, finger snapping, and walking while holding a glass of water.
The transient unresponsiveness that led to the patient’s admission was attributed to a combination of sedation from clobazam and hypovolemia. Treatment with clobazam was stopped, and hydration was encouraged. A diagnosis of functional neurologic disorder was considered; outpatient physical therapy with continued use of distraction techniques was recommended. The patient was discharged home on the third hospital day.
Episodes of involuntary movements continued to occur on a daily basis at home. Two weeks after discharge, when the patient was doing exercises while sitting in a chair and having a conversation with his wife, he suddenly stopped talking. She found him slumped in the chair with his eyes closed, no longer exercising. When she asked him questions, he repeatedly said “yes.” Emergency medical services were called, and when they arrived, the patient was alert, diaphoretic, and nonverbal. He had a facial droop on the left side and a right gaze preference. The fingerstick blood glucose level was 130 mg per deciliter (7.2 mmol per liter) and the blood pressure 120/60 mm Hg. The patient was transported to the emergency department of this hospital for further evaluation.
In the emergency department, the temporal temperature was 36.6°C, the blood pressure 143/63 mm Hg, the pulse 66 beats per minute, the respiratory rate 18 breaths per minute, and the oxygen saturation 98% while the patient was breathing ambient air. He was alert and interactive. There was a facial droop on the left side. There was no effort against gravity in the left arm. The patient was able to lift the left leg off the bed for 1 to 2 seconds. He had a right gaze deviation that could not be overcome and mild dysarthria. The remainder of the examination was normal. A diagnosis of stroke was considered, and emergency CT angiography was performed.
Dr. Gupta: CT angiography showed no evidence of acute territorial infarction and no changes in cerebrovascular disease.
Dr. Chui: On repeat physical examination performed after CT angiography, the gaze deviation and dysarthria had resolved, and strength was normal. Mild facial paralysis was present.
A diagnosis was made.

Differential Diagnosis

Dr. Albert Y. Hung: This 79-year-old man initially presented with involuntary movements of the left shoulder and face without associated loss of consciousness. Diagnosis of an unusual movement disorder, especially one that is present episodically, can be challenging. Videos brought in by the patient can be very useful. 1 Most movement disorders result from abnormal functioning of extrapyramidal circuits involving the basal ganglia, rather than a specific neuroanatomical lesion, and the first step toward diagnosis is to identify the type of abnormal movements. 2
Four salient aspects of this patient’s involuntary movements can help in characterizing the movement disorder before generating a differential diagnosis. First, the movements were paroxysmal, lasting for short periods of time with resolution between episodes. Second, the movements were nonstereotyped, appearing randomly and variably. Third, the movements were restricted to the left side of his body throughout the course, localizing the disease process to the right cerebral hemisphere. Finally, the symptoms were progressive, increasing in both duration and frequency.

Movement Disorders

This patient had abnormal involuntary movements, symptoms indicative of a hyperkinetic movement disorder. Tremor, the most common hyperkinetic disorder, is unlikely because the patient did not have rhythmic movements. Dystonia is also unlikely, because he did not have sustained muscle contractions that were causing twisting or abnormal postures of the legs, arms, head, neck, or face. Although the patient initially described the movements as twitching, his later descriptions are not suggestive of myoclonus or tics, which manifest as sudden, rapid, recurrent movements.
This patient’s neurologist described the involuntary movements as “choreoathetoid” after reviewing a video of an episode. Chorea, athetosis, and ballism make up a spectrum of involuntary movements that often occur in combination. Chorea refers to involuntary movements that are “dancelike” — irregular, random, unintended, and flowing from one body part to another. When these movements are slow and writhing (with a lower amplitude) and involve the distal limbs, the term athetosis is used. The presence of both chorea and athetosis in the same patient is referred to as choreoathetosis. When the movements are fast and flinging (with a higher amplitude) and involve the proximal limbs, the term ballism is used. Although the description of this patient’s movements was not clearly suggestive of ballism, hemichorea and hemiballismus often occur together.
The term dyskinesia can refer to any abnormal movements and is often used to describe hyperkinetic disorders that are induced by specific drugs, such as tardive dyskinesia induced by dopamine antagonists or dyskinesia induced by levodopa in patients with Parkinson’s disease. Often, dyskinesia manifests as chorea or choreoathetoid movements, but chorea and dyskinesia are not synonymous. This patient appears to have involuntary dyskinesia with choreoathetosis as the primary phenomenology. Before constructing a differential diagnosis for dyskinesia in this patient, I will consider two conditions that mimic dyskinesia: seizures and functional movement disorder.

Seizures

Various movement disorders may be mistaken for seizures, although these movement disorders are not associated with EEG abnormalities during the episode. Patients with some forms of epilepsy may present with abnormal movements without other features that are typically associated with seizures, such as aura, change in responsiveness, incontinence, or a postictal state. 3,4 Seizures were initially suspected in this patient, and he was referred to the epilepsy clinic. Recurrent focal seizures were probably suspected because of the transient nature of the episodes. Initial MRI had shown a small abnormality in the right middle frontal gyrus, but this finding was not seen on follow-up imaging, which makes it unlikely to be related to the overall presentation. Baseline EEG had shown only brief left temporal slowing, without epileptiform abnormalities. The EEG was an interictal study, so the findings do not rule out seizures. However, the slowing was ipsilateral to the abnormal movements, so it is unlikely to be related to the episodes. In addition, the patient’s involuntary movements were nonstereotyped and nonrhythmic, which makes his presentation unlikely to be due to a seizure disorder.

Functional Movement Disorder

Because this patient’s movements diminished with the use of distraction techniques, a diagnosis of functional movement disorder was considered. Most cases of functional movement disorder begin abruptly after a trigger, such as a mild physical injury or illness; a psychological stressor can be present but is not required for diagnosis. Symptoms are typically most severe around the time of onset and may wax and wane over time. Although distractibility is a finding associated with functional disorders, abnormal movements that occur with nonfunctional syndromes can sometimes be suppressed by action or incorporated into voluntary movements in a manner that may appear distractible. Several clinical features in this patient make a diagnosis of functional disorder unlikely. Functional movement disorder is more common in women than in men, and the average age at onset is 40 years. 5 In addition, tremor is the most common clinical phenotype seen in patients with functional movement disorder; chorea or choreoathetosis, which was seen in this patient, is very unusual in patients with functional movement disorder. Overall, functional movement disorder is unlikely to explain this patient’s presentation.

Dyskinesia

Primary paroxysmal dyskinesia refers to a group of heterogeneous syndromes characterized by recurrent involuntary movements that occur episodically and abruptly, without loss of consciousness. 6 These disorders usually begin in childhood or young adulthood. Both the age of this patient and the described phenomenology make a diagnosis of primary paroxysmal dyskinesia unlikely.
The differential diagnosis in this case is therefore focused on causes of secondary dyskinesia, of which there are many. 7 MRI ruled out the presence of a mass lesion suggestive of cancer. The patient had no history of acute illness suggestive of a viral or other infectious encephalitis, and there was no history of trauma or exposure to drugs or other toxins. Although his daughter mentioned trouble with memory, there was no compelling history suggestive of a neurodegenerative disease.
A common metabolic cause of secondary dyskinesia is diabetic striatopathy, a syndrome involving the acute-to-subacute onset of chorea and ballism in the context of hyperglycemia. 8 This syndrome can occur as the initial manifestation of type 2 diabetes mellitus or as a complication of poorly controlled diabetes. Diabetic striatopathy is more likely to develop in women than in men, and the average age at onset is 70 years. Most patients present with hemichorea and hemiballismus, rather than bilateral symptoms. CT shows hyperdensity, and T1-weighted MRI shows hyperintensity, in the contralateral basal ganglia. However, this patient had no history of diabetes and had a normal blood glycated hemoglobin level, features that rule out a diagnosis of diabetic striatopathy.
Choreiform movements can also be a manifestation of autoimmune conditions. 9 This patient’s initial presentation with unilateral shoulder and face movements would have suggested the possibility of faciobrachial dystonic seizures associated with anti–leucine-rich, glioma-inactivated 1 (anti-LGI1) encephalitis. 10 This condition is often associated with hyponatremia, which was present in this patient. However, as the case evolved, leg involvement and sensory changes developed that would be atypical for anti-LGI1 encephalitis.
One key clue in this case is that the patient did not have an isolated movement disorder. In addition to motor symptoms, he had a variety of sensory symptoms involving both the left arm and the left leg. His first hospital admission was precipitated by an episode of unresponsiveness. The clinical event that led to his second presentation to the emergency department was distinctly different: an acute onset of speech difficulty accompanied by left hemiparesis and right gaze deviation that was worrisome for an acute right middle cerebral artery (MCA) syndrome. The symptoms resolved without intervention, which indicates that he may have had an acute transient ischemic attack (TIA). The most relevant imaging finding was severe cerebrovascular disease, including severe stenosis of the distal right CCA and proximal right ICA. Could this patient’s movement disorder be explained by a vascular lesion?

Limb-Shaking TIAs

Limb-shaking TIAs were first described by C. Miller Fisher in 1962. 11 In most case reports, these episodes are associated with high-grade stenosis of the ICA, which was seen in this patient. 12,13 The mechanism is thought to be cerebral hypoperfusion, and changes in posture or head position that decrease cerebral blood flow can precipitate these episodes. In this patient, the first episode of unresponsiveness that led to hospital admission occurred when he was sitting. He then had an acute episode involving right gaze preference that was provoked by exercise and was very suggestive of a TIA in the right MCA territory. These findings are highly suggestive of a diagnosis of limb-shaking TIAs, and I would refer this patient for emergency carotid endarterectomy.

Clinical Impression and Initial Management

Dr. Scott B. Silverman: When I evaluated this patient, his transient right gaze preference and left hemiparesis were consistent with a right MCA syndrome due to a TIA from symptomatic severe stenosis of the right ICA. The mechanism of this event was either artery-to-artery embolism or hypoperfusion. His previous, recurrent episodes of transient choreoathetosis on the left side that had occurred mainly while he was sitting, standing, or exercising were consistent with limb-shaking TIAs from hypoperfusion or low flow.
The pathogenesis of a low-flow state related to severe carotid stenosis resulting in limb-shaking TIAs is described in a small case series. 14 In six out of eight patients, the transient, stereotyped, involuntary movements were eliminated with carotid artery revascularization. Positional cerebral ischemia in patients without orthostatic hypotension has been described. 15
Treatment with atorvastatin was continued, the dose of aspirin was increased to 325 mg per day, and an intravenous heparin infusion was started. The strategy of permissive hypertension was used, with high blood pressure allowed to a maximum systolic blood pressure of 180 mm Hg. The patient was admitted to the stroke service, and carotid artery duplex ultrasonography was performed.
Dr. Gupta: Doppler ultrasonography of the carotid arteries (Figure 2) revealed markedly elevated Doppler flow velocities within the proximal right ICA. There was a parvus et tardus waveform in the distal right ICA, a finding indicative of low flow related to the more proximal high-grade stenosis. The Doppler waveform contours had poststenotic turbulence.
Figure 2
Doppler Ultrasound Image.
Dr. Silverman: The vascular surgery service was consulted, and the patient underwent right carotid endarterectomy.

Clinical Diagnosis

Limb-shaking transient ischemic attacks.

Dr. Albert Y. Hung’s Diagnosis

Limb-shaking transient ischemic attacks due to severe carotid stenosis, with secondary paroxysmal dyskinesia.

Pathological Discussion

Dr. Caroline F. Hilburn: The endarterectomy specimen included the carotid bifurcation and was notable for firm arterial walls, a finding consistent with calcification. On gross examination (Figure 3A), a large plaque was centered at the carotid bifurcation and protruded into the lumen, resulting in a maximal luminal stenosis of 80%. The plaque had an irregular and focally friable surface. On microscopic examination (Figure 3B), the plaque was characterized by extensive calcification. Some regions of the plaque had a smooth, healed fibrous cap, whereas other regions had an irregular surface suggestive of ulceration, which indicated potential sites of plaque rupture. Multiple smaller calcified plaques were present, affecting both branches of the artery.
Figure 3
Endarterectomy Specimen.

Pathological Diagnosis

Complex atherosclerotic plaque with portions of attached media.

Additional Management

Dr. Silverman: After the procedure, the patient had an uneventful recovery and was discharged home on the fifth hospital day. He was seen 1 month after discharge in the stroke prevention clinic. There had been no further episodes of involuntary movements or choreoathetosis and no stroke or TIA. The patient continues to take aspirin, atorvastatin, and antihypertensive medications.

Final Diagnosis

Limb-shaking transient ischemic attacks.

以下内容来源于新英格兰医学杂志。

Presentation of Case

Dr. Christine M. Parsons (Medicine): A 75-year-old woman was evaluated at this hospital because of arthritis, abdominal pain, edema, malaise, and fever.

Three weeks before the current admission, the patient noticed waxing and waning “throbbing” pain in the right upper abdomen, which she rated at 9 (on a scale of 0 to 10, with 10 indicating the most severe pain) at its maximal intensity. The pain was associated with nausea and fever with a temperature of up to 39.0°C. Pain worsened after food consumption and was relieved with acetaminophen. During the 3 weeks before the current admission, edema developed in both legs; it had started at the ankles and gradually progressed upward to the hips. When the edema began to affect her ambulation, she presented to the emergency department of this hospital.

A review of systems that was obtained from the patient and her family was notable for intermittent fever, abdominal bloating, anorexia, and fatigue that had progressed during the previous 3 weeks. The patient reported new orthopnea and nonproductive cough. Approximately 4 weeks earlier, she had had diarrhea for several days. During the 6 weeks before the current admission, the patient had lost 9 kg unintentionally; she also had had pain in the wrists and hands, 3 days of burning and dryness of the eyes, and diffuse myalgias. She had not had night sweats, dry mouth, jaw claudication, vision changes, urinary symptoms, or oral, nasal, or genital ulcers.

The patient’s medical history was notable for multiple myeloma (for which treatment with thalidomide and melphalan had been initiated 2 years earlier and was stopped approximately 1 year before the current admission); hypothyroidism; chikungunya virus infection (diagnosed 7 years earlier); seropositive erosive rheumatoid arthritis affecting the hands, wrists, elbows, and shoulders (diagnosed 3 years earlier); vitiligo; and osteoarthritis of the right hip, for which she had undergone arthroplasty. Evidence of gastritis was reportedly seen on endoscopy that had been performed 6 months earlier. Medications included daily treatment with levothyroxine and acetaminophen and pipazethate hydrochloride as needed for cough. The patient consumed chamomile and horsetail herbal teas. She had no known allergies to medications, but she had been advised not to take nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs after her diagnosis of multiple myeloma.

Approximately 5 months before the current admission, the patient had emigrated from Central America. She lived with her daughter and grandchildren in an urban area of New England. She had previously worked in health care. She had no history of alcohol, tobacco, or other substance use. There was no family history of cancer or autoimmune, renal, gastrointestinal, pulmonary, or cardiac disease.

On examination, the temporal temperature was 37.1°C, the heart rate 106 beats per minute, the blood pressure 152/67 mm Hg, and the oxygen saturation 100% while the patient was breathing ambient air. She had a frail appearance and bitemporal cachexia. The weight was 41 kg and the body-mass index (the weight in kilograms divided by the square of the height in meters) 15.2. Her dentition was poor; most of the teeth were missing, caries were present in the remaining teeth, and the mucous membranes were dry. She had abdominal tenderness on the right side and mild abdominal distention, without organomegaly or guarding. Bilateral axillary lymphadenopathy was palpable. Infrequent inspiratory wheezing was noted.

The patient had swan-neck deformity, boutonnière deformity, ulnar deviation, and distal hyperextensibility of the thumbs (Fig. 1). Subcutaneous nodules were observed on the proximal interphalangeal joints of the second and third fingers of the right hand and on the proximal interphalangeal joint of the fourth finger of the left hand. Synovial thickening of the metacarpophalangeal joints of the second fingers was noted. There was mild swelling and tenderness of the wrists. She had pain with flexion of the shoulders and right hip, and there was subtle swelling of the shoulders and right knee. Pitting edema (3+) and vitiligo were noted on the legs. No sclerodactyly, digital pitting, telangiectasias, appreciable calcinosis, nodules, nail changes (including pitting), or tophi were present. The remainder of the examination was normal.

Figure 1

Photograph of the Hands.

The blood levels of glucose, alanine aminotransferase, aspartate aminotransferase, bilirubin, globulin, lactate, lipase, magnesium, and phosphorus were normal, as were the prothrombin time and international normalized ratio; other laboratory test results are shown in Table 1. Urinalysis showed 3+ protein and 3+ blood, and microscopic examination of the sediment revealed 5 to 10 red cells per high-power field and granular casts. Urine and blood were obtained for culture. An electrocardiogram met (at a borderline level) the voltage criteria for left ventricular hypertrophy.

Table 1
Laboratory Data.

Dr. Rene Balza Romero: Computed tomography (CT) of the chest, abdomen, and pelvis, performed after the intravenous administration of contrast material, revealed scattered subcentimeter pulmonary nodules (including clusters in the right middle lobe and patchy and ground-glass opacities in the left upper lobe), trace pleural effusion in the left lung, coronary and valvular calcifications, and trace pericardial effusion, ascites, and anasarca. The scans also showed slight enlargement of the axillary lymph nodes (up to 11 mm in the short axis) bilaterally and a chronic-appearing compression fracture involving the T12 vertebral body.

Dr. Parsons: Morphine and lactated Ringer’s solution were administered intravenously. On the second day in the emergency department (also referred to as hospital day 2), the blood levels of haptoglobin, folate, and vitamin B12 were normal; other laboratory test results are shown in Table 1. A rapid antigen test for malaria was positive. Wright–Giemsa staining of thick and thin peripheral-blood smears was negative for parasites; the smears also showed Döhle bodies and basophilic stippling. Antigliadin antibodies and anti–tissue transglutaminase antibodies were not detected. Tests for hepatitis A IgG and hepatitis C antibodies were positive. Tests for hepatitis B core and surface antibodies were negative. A test for human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) and type 2 (HIV-2) was negative.

Findings on abdominal ultrasound imaging performed on the second day (Fig. 2A and 2B) were notable for a small volume of ascites and kidneys with echogenic parenchyma. Ultrasonography of the legs showed no deep venous thrombosis. An echocardiogram showed normal ventricular size and function, aortic sclerosis with mild aortic insufficiency, moderate tricuspid regurgitation, a right ventricular systolic pressure of 39 mm Hg, and a small circumferential pericardial effusion. Intravenous hydromorphone was administered, and the patient was admitted to the hospital.

Figure 2

Imaging Studies of the Abdomen and Hands.

On the third day (also referred to as hospital day 3), nucleic acid testing for cytomegalovirus, Epstein–Barr virus, and hepatitis C virus was negative, and a stool antigen test for Helicobacter pylori was negative. An interferon-γ release assay for Mycobacterium tuberculosis was also negative. Oral acetaminophen and ivermectin and intravenous hydromorphone and furosemide were administered.

Dr. Balza Romero: Radiographs of the hands (Fig. 2C through 2F) showed joint-space narrowing of both radiocarpal joints and proximal interphalangeal erosions involving both hands. Radiographs of the shoulders showed arthritis of the glenohumeral joint and alignment suggestive of a tear of the right rotator cuff. A radiograph of the pelvis showed diffuse joint-space narrowing of the left hip, without osteophytosis, and an intact right hip prosthesis.

Dr. Parsons: Diagnostic tests were performed, and management decisions were made.

Differential Diagnosis

Dr. Beth L. Jonas: This patient is a 75-year-old woman who recently emigrated from Central America. She presented to this hospital with a multisystem disease involving the respiratory, gastrointestinal, renal, and musculoskeletal systems. Her medical history is notable for seropositive erosive rheumatoid arthritis and multiple myeloma, which had been treated with melphalan and thalidomide. Relevant clinical features on presentation include unintended weight loss and cachexia, axillary lymphadenopathy, serositis, cytopenia in two cell lines, hypocomplementemia, and elevated serum free kappa and lambda light-chain levels (with a normal free light-chain ratio) with no monoclonal spike. The white-cell count was elevated, but she had no eosinophilia. CT images of the chest showed scattered subcentimeter pulmonary nodules. With respect to the patient’s anemia, no schistocytes were present, the haptoglobin level was normal, and the iron studies were unremarkable. These findings, in combination with the elevated ferritin level, indicate anemia of chronic inflammation. The renal findings are most salient in the context of the patient’s hypertension, anasarca, elevated cystatin C level, active urinary sediment with proteinuria in the nephrotic range, and small, echogenic kidneys on ultrasonography.
In constructing a differential diagnosis, I will consider medication use, cancer, infectious disease, and autoimmune disease. Medications can be eliminated as the cause of this patient’s illness, since she was taking only levothyroxine, acetaminophen, and the antitussive agent pipazethate.

Cancer

The patient has a history of multiple myeloma, which may manifest with a multisystem disease involving the kidneys, but serum protein electrophoresis showed no monoclonal protein. Given the presence of nephrotic syndrome in the context of multiple myeloma, systemic immunoglobulin light-chain amyloidosis would be highest on the differential diagnosis with respect to cancer; however, the patient’s normal light-chain ratio makes this diagnosis unlikely. The development of myeloid neoplasms, such as acute myeloid leukemia, myelodysplastic syndromes, and myeloproliferative neoplasms, is important to consider in the context of previous treatment with alkylating agents, 1 which this patient had received. However, the peripheral-blood smear showed no findings that would indicate a hematologic cancer, and such a diagnosis would not explain the patient’s acute kidney injury with nephrotic-range proteinuria.

Infectious Disease

Several features of this patient’s case warrant special consideration, including her history of immunosuppression due to rheumatoid arthritis and to previously treated myeloma, along with the fact that she had emigrated from Central America, where certain infections may be prevalent. Infection with hepatitis A virus, hepatitis B virus, hepatitis C virus, HIV-1 and HIV-2, cytomegalovirus, Epstein–Barr virus, H. pylori, and M. tuberculosis can be ruled out on the basis of laboratory studies. A rapid antigen test for plasmodium species was reported to be positive, but this assay has a known cross-reactivity with rheumatoid factor. 2 Moreover, the thick and thin peripheral-blood smears were negative. Thus, malaria would be an unlikely diagnosis.
The patient has a history of infection with chikungunya virus, an arbovirus transmitted by a mosquito vector that has been responsible for large epidemics in the Americas since 2013. 3 Acute symptoms include fever, rash, arthralgia, and myalgia. The development of a chronic arthritis that may meet the classification criteria for rheumatoid arthritis, as defined by the American College of Rheumatology and the European Alliance of Associations for Rheumatology, has been reported in up to 60% of patients infected with chikungunya virus. 4,5 In the context of this discussion, I considered whether chikungunya virus infection could be the cause of this patient’s symptoms, since this infection occurred before the diagnosis of rheumatoid arthritis. However, the degree of erosion and loss of joint space that was visible on radiographs would be most unusual for arthritis associated with chikungunya virus infection and would not explain the renal manifestations.
Strongyloidiasis is a helminth infection (caused by Strongyloides stercoralis) that is widespread in developing countries. Infection usually occurs through contact with soil, and most affected persons are asymptomatic. However, in immunosuppressed persons, strongyloides hyperinfection syndrome or a disseminated infection can develop as a consequence of accelerated autoinfection. 6 The clinical presentation of strongyloides hyperinfection syndrome can include gastrointestinal symptoms (diarrhea, constipation, nausea, or vomiting), respiratory symptoms (cough, dyspnea, or wheezing), and rash due to migration of larvae through the subcutaneous tissues. Of note, only a minority of patients present with eosinophilia. Several case reports describe the development of nephrotic-range proteinuria, thrombotic microangiopathy, and IgA vasculitis in patients with strongyloides hyperinfection syndrome. 7-9 However, strongyloidiasis would not explain this patient’s cytopenias and hypocomplementemia.

Autoimmune Disease

The patient has a 3-year history of rheumatoid arthritis, although her clinical features of swan-neck deformity, boutonnière deformity, and joint instability suggest a longer duration of disease. We do not know whether she had received previous treatment with disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs or biologic agents, but the possible use of such treatments may be a consideration with respect to her progression of disease and overall degree of immunosuppression. The blood levels of rheumatoid factor and anti–cyclic citrullinated peptide antibodies were elevated, and radiographs of the hands showed erosive disease, although there was a relative paucity of metacarpophalangeal findings. A review of systems was negative for dry mouth, but her physical examination showed poor dentition and dry mouth — findings that make secondary Sjögren’s syndrome a consideration.
Renal disease can occur in patients with Sjögren’s syndrome. The two most typical presentations are tubulointerstitial nephritis and, less commonly, nephritic syndrome (membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis related to cryoglobulinemia). Tubulointerstitial nephritis may manifest with renal disease of varying severity, usually with a bland urinary sediment and often with abnormalities of tubular function such as distal renal tubular acidosis. Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis caused by cryoglobulinemia is the most common glomerular disease associated with Sjögren’s syndrome. Although nephrotic-range proteinuria can occur with Sjögren’s syndrome, it is relatively uncommon. 10 Renal disease is uncommon in patients with rheumatoid arthritis and is usually related to coexisting cardiovascular conditions. Medications used in the treatment of autoimmune disease — mainly nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs — may be associated with renal disease, but I would not expect the presence of an active urinary sediment, as was seen in this patient.
Amyloid A (AA) amyloidosis, a condition that is rare in the era of aggressive management of rheumatoid arthritis, has been described in patients with severe, long-standing seropositive erosive rheumatoid arthritis. Serum amyloid A (SAA) is a protein that is produced in the liver in response to chronic inflammation associated with interleukin-1, interleukin-6, and tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α) in the context of chronic infections, autoimmune disease (classically rheumatoid arthritis), autoinflammatory disease, and cancers including renal cell carcinoma and non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. 11 Signs and symptoms of AA amyloidosis are related to the deposition of the protein in organs, and patients often present with multisystem signs and symptoms. The kidney is the organ that is most often affected, but deposition can occur in the heart, gastrointestinal tract, nervous system, musculoskeletal system, and lungs. Proteinuria is the first clinical manifestation in almost 95% of patients with AA amyloidosis, and 50% of affected patients present with nephrotic syndrome. 12 The urinary sediment is generally bland, and complement levels in the blood are normal. AA amyloidosis remains on the differential diagnosis in this patient, but it would not completely explain her renal disease.

Hypocomplementemia

The key to this case is understanding the cause of this patient’s hypocomplementemia. Hypocomplementemia can be due to decreased complement production in the context of liver disease, congenital complement deficiency, or increased complement consumption resulting from activation of the innate immune system. This patient has no history of chronic liver disease and her laboratory test results indicated good hepatic synthetic function. Classical complement deficiency (including C4 deficiency) that begins early in life is associated with autoimmune disease, and early C3 deficiency is characterized by severe pyogenic infections. It would be unusual for a patient of this age to be deficient in both C3 and C4 without earlier clinical consequences. I therefore concluded that the hypocomplementemia in this case was related to complement consumption.
Rheumatic diseases that may be associated with prominent renal manifestations include antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody–associated vasculitis, systemic sclerosis with renal crisis, cryoglobulinemic vasculitis, antiglomerular basement membrane disease, and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Of those conditions, SLE would be the most likely to be manifested by an active urinary sediment and nephrotic-range proteinuria with consumption of both C3 and C4 in the context of fever, thrombocytopenia, and serositis. This patient’s fever, thrombocytopenia, and serositis also fit with this diagnosis. 13
Because the patient has long-standing seropositive erosive rheumatoid arthritis, a diagnosis of AA amyloidosis is strongly suspected. Moreover, given the presence of thrombocytopenia, hypocomplementemia, and an active urinary sediment, I would recommend a kidney biopsy to evaluate for lupus nephritis and AA amyloidosis.

Dr. Beth L. Jonas’s Diagnosis

Overlap syndrome of rheumatoid arthritis and systemic lupus erythematosus with amyloid A amyloidosis.

Pathological Discussion

Dr. Claire Trivin-Avillach: Testing for autoimmune antibodies was performed. A test for antinuclear antibodies was positive at a titer of 1:5120 with a homogeneous pattern, and a test for anti–double-stranded DNA antibodies was positive at a titer of 1:2560.
The diagnostic procedure in this case was a core-needle biopsy of the kidney. Examination of the specimen with light microscopy revealed 20 glomeruli, 45% of which were globally sclerosed, along with fibrosis involving approximately 60% of the interstitium and tubular atrophy. Diffusely enlarged glomeruli with thickened capillary walls and an expanded mesangium were weakly positive on periodic acid–Schiff staining; the glomeruli stained pale blue on Masson’s trichrome staining. Congo red staining revealed metachromatic salmon-colored deposition involving the glomeruli, the blood-vessel walls, and the interstitium, which was associated with apple-green birefringence when viewed under polarized light (Fig. 3A). In addition, mesangial and endocapillary hypercellularity was identified in approximately 30% of the nonsclerosed glomeruli and was associated with karyorrhexis (Fig. 3B). One cellular crescent was also detected. These features are characteristic of active proliferative glomerulonephritis.
Figure 3
Biopsy Specimen of the Kidney.
Immunofluorescence microscopy revealed prominent granular staining for IgG (4+), IgM (4+), C3 (3+), C1q (3+), IgA (1+), kappa (3+), and lambda (3+) along the glomerular basement membranes and within the mesangium, as well as focal granular deposits of IgG and C3 along the tubular basement membrane (Fig. 3C and 3D). Additional immunofluorescence studies showed strong positivity (4+) for SAA within the glomeruli, the blood-vessel walls, and the interstitium (Fig. 3E), whereas staining for beta2-microglobulin, transthyretin, and apolipoprotein A1 was faint.
Electron microscopy revealed the presence of subendothelial and mesangial electron-dense deposits (with no substructure identified) adjacent to randomly arranged fibrils (measuring 8.2 to 10.6 nm in diameter) within the glomerular basement membranes and the mesangium (Fig. 3F). Glomerular endothelial cells appeared reactive and contained tubuloreticular inclusions, features that were suggestive of interferon-mediated activation.
The findings on Congo red staining were characteristic of amyloidosis with typical birefringent material. The strong positivity of SAA within the deposits as compared with the faint staining of other reactants identified the type of amyloid as SAA, which is consistent with the patient’s history of rheumatoid arthritis. The biopsy also showed an immune complex–mediated proliferative glomerulonephritis with a “full house” pattern (defined as positivity for the three immunoglobulin classes IgG, IgM, and IgA and the two complement components C3 and C1q, in reference to the “full house” hand in a poker game). Immune complex–mediated proliferative glomerulonephritis has been reported in patients with rheumatoid arthritis who were receiving anti–TNF-α therapy, 14 which was not the case in this patient. The positive test for hepatitis C antibodies prompted consideration of hepatitis C–related membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis. However, taken together, the negative nucleic acid test for hepatitis C virus, the full house pattern on immunofluorescence, the tubular basement membrane deposits, and the positive test for anti–double-stranded DNA antibodies favor a diagnosis of lupus nephritis of at least class III (defined as focal proliferative glomerulonephritis), according to the criteria of the International Society of Nephrology and the Renal Pathology Society, superimposed on AA amyloidosis.

Pathological Diagnosis

Proliferative lupus nephritis of International Society of Nephrology and Renal Pathology Society class III, superimposed on amyloid A amyloidosis.

Discussion of Management

Dr. Pui W. Cheung: On the basis of the finding of echogenic kidneys on ultrasonography and the findings of extensive interstitial fibrosis and tubular atrophy on kidney biopsy, we know that this patient has advanced chronic kidney disease that is unlikely to be reversible. The patient is also noted to have a markedly lower glomerular filtration rate (GFR) than that predicted by the blood creatinine level owing to the presence of cachexia, and this is substantiated by the cystatin C–based GFR and a 24-hour creatinine clearance of 22 ml per minute per 1.73 m2 of body-surface area. The typical induction therapy for stage III or IV lupus nephritis consists of high-dose glucocorticoids and either mycophenolate mofetil or cyclophosphamide. Other reasonable alternatives for initial therapy include mycophenolate mofetil in combination with either a calcineurin inhibitor or belimumab, or cyclophosphamide in combination with belimumab. 15 Hydroxychloroquine is also recommended as part of the therapy, since it has shown benefits in improving the response to treatment and reducing disease flare. 16 Mycophenolate mofetil and cyclophosphamide have similar efficacy with respect to clinical response, which includes a reduction in proteinuria and either an improvement in renal function or stabilization of renal function; the risks of infections and adverse events associated with these medications are also similar. 17,18
Given the severity of the lupus nephritis with overlying AA amyloidosis from active rheumatoid arthritis, the treatment options proposed were high-dose glucocorticoids and rituximab with either mycophenolate mofetil or cyclophosphamide. 19 After discussions with multidisciplinary consultants from rheumatology, infectious diseases, and nephrology, lingering concerns were raised about infection and patient frailty; ultimately, the decision was made to initiate high-dose glucocorticoid therapy in combination with mycophenolate mofetil, rituximab, and hydroxychloroquine.
The patient’s mycophenolate mofetil dose regimen was inconsistent owing to gastrointestinal side effects, and the treatment was eventually withheld because of pancytopenia and fever. Unfortunately, her kidney function worsened, and renal replacement therapy was initiated within 3 weeks after the start of the induction therapy. The cause of her renal failure was thought to be disease progression, compounded by hemodynamically mediated tubular injury in the context of infection. While the administration of mycophenolate mofetil was stopped, treatment with rituximab was continued, with slow tapering of the glucocorticoid dose at the direction of the rheumatologist. She remained dependent on dialysis and was deemed to have end-stage kidney disease after 3 months of dialysis.
Dr. Lisa G. Criscione-Schreiber: The patient has SLE with nephritis, seropositive erosive rheumatoid arthritis, and systemic AA amyloidosis. AA amyloidosis is rare owing to the availability of effective therapies for rheumatoid arthritis and is managed through aggressive treatment of inflammation due to rheumatoid arthritis. Reports addressing the management of rheumatoid arthritis–induced AA amyloidosis generally cite stability of end-organ damage caused by AA amyloid as evidence of effective management of the condition (through treatment of the inflammation of rheumatoid arthritis). Methotrexate, the cornerstone of treatment for rheumatoid arthritis, is contraindicated in this case owing to the presence of kidney disease. The alkylating agent cyclophosphamide has been reported to be effective for the treatment of AA amyloidosis from rheumatoid arthritis 20 and has known efficacy in patients with lupus nephritis, both of which make it a viable treatment option. Rituximab has also been reported to be effective for managing rheumatoid arthritis–induced AA amyloidosis, 21 is approved for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis, and is used for manifestations of SLE, including thrombocytopenia and nephritis. Although anti–TNF-α agents, abatacept, and Janus kinase inhibitors are reported to be effective for the treatment of AA amyloidosis in patients with rheumatoid arthritis, 22 recent publications have coalesced on the ability of anti–interleukin-6 therapy to block interleukin-6–induced hepatic production of SAA. 23-25
The overlap of seropositive erosive rheumatoid arthritis and SLE (sometimes termed “rhupus”) usually resembles rheumatoid arthritis more than SLE; manifestations include thrombocytosis, leukocytosis, an elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate, an elevated blood level of C-reactive protein, and the presence of marginal erosions on radiographs. 26 In contrast, SLE without seropositive erosive rheumatoid arthritis characteristically manifests with thrombocytopenia, leukopenia, and an elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate but usually not an elevated C-reactive protein level; in addition, nonerosive inflammatory arthritis with reversible deformities is commonly observed. This patient had a mixed laboratory profile, on the basis of the results of antinuclear antibody and anti–double-stranded DNA antibody tests. The challenge of treating an overlap syndrome of rheumatoid arthritis and SLE is choosing disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs that are effective and safe in both conditions. This patient’s most severe disease manifestation is lupus nephritis; therefore, the treatment regimen must target nephritis along with the AA amyloidosis and inflammatory arthritis.
As noted earlier, current induction therapy for lupus nephritis includes either mycophenolate mofetil or cyclophosphamide. Mycophenolate mofetil may provide inadequate treatment of the rheumatoid arthritis and amyloidosis, whereas cyclophosphamide would treat the lupus nephritis, has possible efficacy for treatment of the AA amyloidosis, and would treat the rheumatoid arthritis. Rituximab could be added to cyclophosphamide or mycophenolate mofetil to treat the rheumatoid arthritis and resultant AA amyloidosis and could also possibly help treat the lupus nephritis. The addition of anti–interleukin-6 therapy to mycophenolate mofetil or cyclophosphamide is an intriguing option that may effectively treat the rheumatoid arthritis and subsequent AA amyloidosis. The addition of belimumab to mycophenolate mofetil or cyclophosphamide has been reported to improve renal response in patients with lupus nephritis, 27 as has the addition of voclosporin to mycophenolate mofetil. 28 However, belimumab is ineffective for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis, and voclosporin has not been studied in patients with rheumatoid arthritis or in those with a GFR of 45 milliliters per minute or less. The high-dose glucocorticoids that are used in induction therapy for lupus nephritis will effectively manage this patient’s inflammatory arthritis and probably also the subsequent AA amyloidosis. Finally, it is important that every patient with lupus nephritis receive hydroxychloroquine, which improves the treatment response to induction therapy. 29

Follow-up

Dr. Parsons: The patient’s hospital course was further complicated by suspected immune-mediated thrombocytopenia, for which she received intravenous immune globulin. Her pancytopenia and arthritis ultimately abated. Unfortunately, she did not have renal recovery and continues to receive hemodialysis. After a prolonged hospital course, she was discharged home.

Final Diagnosis

Overlap syndrome of rheumatoid arthritis and systemic lupus erythematosus complicated by proliferative lupus nephritis, superimposed on amyloid A amyloidosis.

以下内容来源于PubMed。

Abstract

Sacituzumab govitecan (SG) significantly improved progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) versus chemotherapy in hormone receptor-positive human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative (HR+HER2-) metastatic breast cancer (mBC) in the global TROPiCS-02 study. TROPiCS-02 enrolled few Asian patients. Here we report results of SG in Asian patients with HR+HER2- mBC from the EVER-132-002 study. Patients were randomized to SG (n = 166) or chemotherapy (n = 165). The primary endpoint was met: PFS was improved with SG versus chemotherapy (hazard ratio of 0.67, 95% confidence interval 0.52-0.87; P = 0.0028; median 4.3 versus 4.2 months). OS also improved with SG versus chemotherapy (hazard ratio of 0.64, 95% confidence interval 0.47-0.88; P = 0.0061; median 21.0 versus 15.3 months). The most common grade ≥3 treatment-emergent adverse events were neutropenia, leukopenia and anemia. SG demonstrated significant and clinically meaningful improvement in PFS and OS versus chemotherapy, with a manageable safety profile consistent with prior studies. SG represents a promising treatment option for Asian patients with HR+HER2- mBC (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier no. NCT04639986 ).

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