Abstract

PurposeNitrous oxide (N2O) abuse has become an increasingly severe problem in China. The aim of the study was to summarize the features of N2O-induced neurology and enhance the awareness of this disease among physicians.Patients and MethodsWe retrospectively reviewed the clinical, imaging, electrophysiological characteristics and the prognosis of patients with N2O neurotoxicity in our hospital from January 2016 to August 2019.ResultsTwenty-one patients (average age: 22.6±4.6 years) were collected. Eighty-six percent (18/21) patients presented with acute or subacute neurological disorders as their initial symptoms. The remaining fourteen percent (3/21) had psychiatric symptoms as the earliest symptoms. With progression, movement dysfunction appeared in ninety percent (19/21) of the patients with fifty-three percent (10/19) presented with weakness limited to both lower extremities. Sixty-two percent (13/21) of the patients presented with subjective sensory deficit. Seventy-one percent (15/21) had vibration sense impairment and positive Romberg’s sign. Sixty-seven percent of the patients had hyporeflexia or areflexia. Fourteen percent (3/21) showed positive Babinski’s sign. Seventy-eight percent (14/18) showed significantly increased homocysteine (HCY) level and only seventeen percent (3/18) showed decreased serum vitamin B12 level. T2 hyperintensity involving the posterior columns and lateral columns with inverted V sign in cervical spinal MRI had been observed in forty-seven percent (8/17) of the patients. Axonal peripheral neuropathy occurred in eighty-five percent (17/20) of the patients. The level of serum vitamin B12 and HCY, as well as imaging findings, were rapidly recovered after supplementation of Vitamin B12.ConclusionThe N2O-induced neuropsychiatric disturbances mainly occurred in the young groups and should be recognized by clinicians. The prognosis of N2O intoxication is relatively good.

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