Abstract

Background: The intracranial mycotic aneurysm is known to be a rare complication of infective endocarditis and it is more clinically challenging to get this diagnosis right when it happened to be in a patient without a past medical history of heart diseases. We report a documented case of mycotic aneurysm revealed by isolated left hemiparesis and our management with the collaboration of the cardiology department. Case Description: A 48-year-old male patient with a history of teeth loss, a chronic smoker presented with sudden heaviness in the left upper and lower limbs. No fever. Physical examination revealed a left hemiparesis of 3/5 on the muscle tone scale without the stiffness of the neck. The CT-Scan and the MRI conclude of subarachnoid and cerebral hemorrhage with right temporal hematoma being most probably a vascular malformation. The cerebral arteriography concluded of a right Sylvian mycotic distal aneurysm in the M4 segment. Transesophageal echocardiography was performed and concluded of infectious endocarditis with mitral and aortic valvular disease grade II. Positive blood culture for staphylococcus coagulase-negative. The patient was managed with antibiotic therapy and clinically stable after 28 days. He was then transferred to the cardiology department for follow-up. Six (6) months later a CT-angiography was done for a check-up and shows no further changes in the aneurysm. The patient underwent surgery, two (2) months later, for clipping the aneurysm because the aneurysm did not regress in size. The aneurysm was then excluded with an eventless post-operative period, confirmed by controlled cerebral arteriography. The patient was discharged five (5) days later and he is doing well. Conclusion: Mycotic aneurysm is a rare consequence of infective endocarditis. The distal sites of the middle cerebral artery are commonly found, and conservative treatment with a long course of antibiotics like amoxicillin 12 g/24h for 6 weeks or direct surgical clipping or excision can manage it.

Highlights

  • Church (1869) was the first to build a relationship between intracranial mycotic aneurysm and endocarditis in a 13-year-old boy

  • We report a documented case of mycotic aneurysm revealed by isolated left hemiparesis and our management with the collaboration of the cardiology department

  • A mycotic or infectious aneurysm is a dilation of an artery due to systemic seeding of infectious agent causing the damage of the vessel wall

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Summary

A Rare Cause of Hemiparesis

Yao Christian Hugues Dokponou1,2*, Mehdi Hakkou, Olivier Ouambi, Nourou Dine Adeniran Bankole, Abdessamad El Ouahabi.

Introduction
Case Description
Discussion
Findings
Conclusion
Conflicts of Interest
Full Text
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