Abstract
Acute hemorrhagic leukoencephalitis (AHL) is a fulminant demyelinating disease of unknown etiology. Most cases are fatal within one week from onset. AHL pathology varies with the acuteness of disease. Hemorrhages, vessel fibrinoid necrosis, perivascular fibrin exudation, edema and neutrophilic inflammation are early features, while perivascular demyelination, microglial foci and myelin-laden macrophages appear later. Reactive astrocytosis is not present in early hemorrhagic non-demyelinated lesions, but is seen in older lesions. This case report presents the pathology of an AHL case with fulminant course and fatal outcome within 48 hours from presentation. Severe hemorrhages, edema and neutrophilic inflammation in the absence of circumscribed perivascular demyelination affected the temporal neocortex and white matter, hippocampus, cerebellar cortex and white matter, optic chiasm, mammillary bodies, brainstem, cranial nerve roots and leptomeninges. Perivascular end-feet and parenchymal processes of astrocytes exhibited impressive swelling in haemorrhagic but non-demyelinated white matter regions. Astrocytes were dystrophic and displayed degenerating processes. Astrocytic swellings and remnants were immunoreactive for aquaporin-4, aquaporin-1 and glial fibrillary acidic protein. These morphological changes of astrocytes consistent with injury were also observed in haemorrhagic and normal appearing cortex. Our findings reinforce that perivascular demyelination is not present early in AHL. This is the first study that highlights the early and widespread astrocytic injury in the absence of demyelination in AHL, suggesting that, similarly to neuromyelitis optica and central pontine myelinolysis, demyelination in AHL is secondary to astrocyte injury.
Highlights
Acute hemorrhagic leukoencephalitis (AHL), or Hurst’s disease, is a fulminant demyelinating disease of unknown etiology with fatal outcome within one week from onset due to severe cerebral edema and herniation [1,2]
While haemorrhagic perivascular demyelination is considered the histopathologic hallmark of AHL, previous studies have shown that the pathology of AHL varies with the acuteness of the disease [6,7]
The predominance and severity of haemorrhages and edema, and the preponderance of neutrophils in inflammatory infiltrates we have found in this case coupled with the absence of frank perivascular demyelination, the absence of macrophages and the rarity of perivascular microglial infiltrates are acute histopathological features consistent with the short interval between onset and death in AHL [6], and similar to what is observed in AHL experimental models [10]
Summary
Acute hemorrhagic leukoencephalitis (AHL), or Hurst’s disease, is a fulminant demyelinating disease of unknown etiology with fatal outcome within one week from onset due to severe cerebral edema and herniation [1,2]. AHL is characterized by the presence of perivascular haemorrhagic demyelinating lesions with prominent edema, axonal injury and predominantly neutrophilic parenchymal and meningeal inflammatory infiltrates [1,2].
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