Name this "pathogen." Belay et al (2005)
Edited image caption: Frontal cerebral cortex of the patient who died of this disease in the United States. Marked astroglial reaction is shown, occasionally with relatively large florid plaques surrounded by vacuoles (arrow in inset) (hematoxylin and eosin stain, original magnification ×40).
Case Report
In early November 2001, a 22-year-old woman living in Florida was
evaluated for depression and memory loss that adversely
affected her work performance and may have contributed
to a traffic ticket she received for failure to yield the right
of way at a traffic sign.
In December 2001, the patient
developed involuntary movements, gait disturbances, difficulty
dressing, and incontinence. The following month,
she was taken to a local emergency department; a computed
tomographic scan of her brain showed no abnormalities,
a diagnosis of panic attack was made, and antianxiety
medications were prescribed.
In late January 2002, the patient was transported to the
United Kingdom, where her mother resided. During the
ensuing 3 months, the patient's motor and cognitive
deficits worsened, which caused falls resulting in minor
injuries; she had difficulty taking care of herself, remembering
her home telephone number, and making accurate
mathematical calculations. She also experienced confusion,
hallucination, dysarthria, bradykinesia, and spasticity.
An electroencephalogram evaluation showed no
abnormalities, but a brain magnetic resonance imaging
(MRI) study showed the characteristic signal abnormalities
in the pulvinar and metathalamic regions .... Western blot
and immunohistochemical analyses of tonsillar biopsy tissue ...
supported the diagnosis....
(No, the 22 yo female is not suffering from medical schoolitis or post-call ;-) )