Abstract

Wernicke's encephalopathy is a pathological entity caused by Vitamin B1 (Thiamine) deficiency in malnourished individuals, especially alcoholics, patients operated for digestive surgery or suffering from gastrointestinal tract's diseases or incoercible vomiting. Classically it manifests by confusion with oculomotor disorders and ataxia. However, other neurological manifestations are possible. Magnetic resonance imaging is the gold standard imaging technique for diagnosis. It shows signal abnormality on periventricular area around the third and fourth ventricles and on mammillary bodies in the most common cases, however other localizations are possible, in particular the cerebral cortex, which can explain the occurrence of epileptic seizures in some patients. Early administration of Thiamine, intravenously or intramuscularly, allows ad-integrum recovery, while delayed treatment is associated with serious consequences in terms of mortality and morbidity with debilitating neurological sequelae. The presence of cortical lesions is of poor prognosis despite a well-managed treatment. In this article, we report a nonalcoholic Wernicke's encephalopathy case, following a subtotal gastrectomy. Epileptic seizures were the major clinical manifestation, related to the associated cortical lesions. Despite early and well-managed treatment, the patient had a poor prognosis, with progression, after one month, to a persistent chronic vegetative state.

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