Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

[Neurological manifestations of Behçet's disease].

36

Citations

10

References

2002

Year

Abstract

The neurological complications of Behçet's Disease are observed in 5 to 35 percent of cases depending of series. They included vascular and central nervous system manifestations. Vascular involvement is dominated by cerebral venous thrombosis marked by benign intracerebral hypertension. Prognosis is favourable with steroids and anticoagulation. Arterial involvement (thrombosis or aneurysm) are seldomly observed but increasingly with angio-MRI. Parenchymal involvement is dominated by meningoencephalitis eventually associated with fever. Myelitis and cranial nerve palsy are seldomly encountered. Cerebrospinal fluid is abnormal with lymphocytosis or pleiocytosis. MRI has a high sensitivity with hypersignals in the brainstem, basal ganglia, internal capsule and thalamus. Prognosis of central nervous system involvement is severe. Initially recovery is frequent, but severe impairment occurs due to relapse. In our experience, therapy including steroids, immunosuppressive drugs and colchicine improve short term and long term prognosis due to significant reduction of relapse in patients with good observance.

References

YearCitations

Page 1