Publication: Is it a secondary cause of vasculitis or a mimic? a case of retinal vasculopathy with cerebral leukoencephalopathy
Program
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Kok YB
Kucukkaya R
Editor & Affiliation
Compiler & Affiliation
Translator
Other Contributor
Date
Language
Type
Embargo Status
No
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Alternative Title
Abstract
Central nervous system involvement in vasculitis disorders, either primary or secondary, is a heterogeneous and challenging area in rheumatology clinical in terms of both diagnostics and therapeutics. Retinal vasculopathy with cerebral leukoencephalopathy and systemic manifestations (RVCL-S) is a rare, difficult-to-diagnose, and ill-defined clinical entity caused by mutations at the TREX1 gene without effective treatment options. We hereby present a 50-year-old male patient with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, hypertension, bilateral type III macular telangiectasia, and stage II chronic kidney disease with mild proteinuria presenting to the rheumatology clinic with various neurological symptoms accompanied by multiple contrast-enhancing cerebral lesions on magnetic resonance imaging. Even though RVCL-S is not an inflammatory vasculopathy, our patient has partially responded to high-dose corticosteroid and cyclophosphamide in terms of clinical status and radiological evaluation. This case report not only highlights the importance of consideration of RVCL-S in the differential diagnosis of central nervous system vasculitis-like disorders but also emphasises the potential use of certain immunosuppressive medications in the therapeutic perspective.
Source
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Subject
Rheumatology, Neurology
Citation
Has Part
Source
Modern Rheumatology Case Reports
Book Series Title
Edition
DOI
10.1093/mrcr/rxag007
item.page.datauri
Link
Rights
Copyrighted
