Abstract

Sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) is the most common prion disease, resulting in rapid neurocognitive decline, and is universally lethal. CJD has a confounding clinical presentation with similarities which overlap with many other neurodegenerative disorders. Brain biopsy is the current gold standard; however, less-invasive initial screening tests are also utilized. These include brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), electroencephalography (EEG), and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) laboratory studies.Five patients presented to our facility with varying levels of nonspecific cognitive impairment and movement disorders. CJD was initially suggested after review of each patient’s brain MRI. The T2-weighted fluid attenuation inversion recovery and diffusion-weighted images in each case demonstrated varied classic patterns of signal abnormality involving the cortex, basal ganglia, thalami, and brainstem. EEG and CSF studies were confirmatory in three and four patients, respectively (EEG not performed in one patient). One death occurred two months after initial presentation, and the other four patients were transferred to hospice three, four, nine, and 20 months after initial presentation.Radiological evaluation is an invaluable component of the workup for nonspecific neurodegenerative disorders because brain MRI may suggest the initial diagnosis of CJD, as demonstrated in our presented cases. Familiarity with the spectrum of classic MRI findings suggestive of sporadic CJD can improve radiologists’ role in early detection of the most common prion disease. Clinicians may benefit from understanding the utility of the newer CSF laboratory studies (Real-time quaking-induced conversion, T-tau, and 14-3-3 protein), which are far less invasive than the gold standard of brain biopsy. Early diagnosis can help save medical resources and guide clinicians to form appropriate plans of care with the patient and family.

Highlights

  • Radiological evaluation is an invaluable component of the workup for nonspecific neurodegenerative disorders because brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) may suggest the initial diagnosis of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD), as demonstrated in our presented cases

  • Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) is an uncommon cause of dementia, but must be considered as a differential diagnosis when suggested by a rapid onset, suggestive electroencephalography (EEG), or imaging findings

  • The University of California-San Francisco (UCSF) criteria outline specific sites in the brain for the radiologist to analyze on Diffusion-weighted image (DWI) and T2-FLAIR images to subsequently provide the clinician with a categorization of “MRI definitely CJD”, “MRI probably CJD”, “MRI definitely not CJD”, or “Other MRI issues” (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) is an uncommon cause of dementia, but must be considered as a differential diagnosis when suggested by a rapid onset, suggestive electroencephalography (EEG), or imaging findings. The UCSF criteria outline specific sites in the brain for the radiologist to analyze on DWI and T2-FLAIR images to subsequently provide the clinician with a categorization of “MRI definitely CJD”, “MRI probably CJD”, “MRI definitely not CJD”, or “Other MRI issues” (Table 1). Imaging of these five patient cases is reviewed below using the 2011 UCSF modified grading system, which illustrate the full spectrum of expected signal abnormalities on MRI associated with CJD. In prolonged courses of CJD (>1 year) brain MRI might show significant atrophy with loss of DWI hyperintensity, in areas previously with restricted diffusion. To help distinguish abnormality from artifact, obtain sequences in multiple directions (e.g., axial and coronal)

Supportive for subcortical involvement
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