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Toxoplasma gondii & Human Phenotype

Compendium of Known Effects and Ongoing Research

magnetic resonance imaging

Cerebral toxoplasmosis in a diffuse large B cell lymphoma patient

May 24, 2016
Savsek, L., Opaskar, T.R.
Radiology and Onkology 2016; 50: 87-93
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Background. Toxoplasmosis is an opportunistic protozoal infection that has, until now, probably been an underestimated cause of encephalitis in patients with hematological malignancies, independent of stem cell or bone marrow transplant. T and B cell depleting regimens are probably an important risk factor for reactivation of a latent toxoplasma infection in these patients. Case report. We describe a 62-year-old HIV-negative right-handed Caucasian female with systemic diffuse large B cell lymphoma who presented with sudden onset of high fever, headache, altered mental status, ataxia and findings of pancytopenia, a few days after receiving her final, 8th cycle of rituximab, cyclophosphamide, vincristine, doxorubicin, prednisolone (R-CHOP) chemotherapy regimen. A progression of lymphoma to the central nervous system was suspected. MRI of the head revealed multiple on T2 and fluid attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) hyperintense parenchymal lesions with mild surrounding edema, located in both cerebral and cerebellar hemispheres that demonstrated moderate gadolinium enhancement. The polymerase chain reaction on cerebrospinal fluid (CSF PCR) was positive for Toxoplasma gondii. The patient was diagnosed with toxoplasmic encephalitis and successfully treated with sulfadiazine, pyrimethamine and folic acid. Due to the need for maintenance therapy with rituximab for lymphoma remission, the patient now continues with secondary prophylaxis of toxoplasmosis. Conclusions. With this case report, we wish to emphasize the need to consider cerebral toxoplasmosis in patients with hematological malignancies on immunosuppressive therapy when presenting with new neurologic deficits. In such patients, there are numerous differential diagnoses for cerebral toxoplasmosis, and the CNS lymphoma is the most difficult among all to distinguish it from. If left untreated, cerebral toxoplasmosis has a high mortality rate; therefore early recognition and treatment are of essential importance.

Tagged: aids patients, b-cell, bone-marrow-transplantation, central-nervous-system, cerebral, diseases, encephalitis, hiv, hosts, immunocompromised, infections, lymphoma, magnetic resonance imaging, prevention, rituximab, strategies, toxoplasmosis, treatment

Mental healthPhysical health

Latent toxoplasmosis reduces gray matter density in schizophrenia but not in controls. Voxel-based-morphometry (VBM) study

October 27, 2012
Horacek, J., Flegr, J., Tintera, J., Verebova, K., Spaniel, F., Novak, T., Brunovsky, M., Bubenikova-Valesova, V., Holub, D., Palenicek, T., Hoschl, C.
The World Journal of Biological Psychiatry 2012; 13: 501-509
Click for abstract
Objectives. To address the role of latent T. gondii infection in schizophrenia we studied the infl uence of latent toxoplasmosis on brain morphology. Methods. An optimized voxel-based morphometry of magnetic resonance imaging was analyzed by analysis of variance with diagnosis and seropositivity as factors in 44 schizophrenic patients (12 T. gondii positive) and 56 controls (13 T. gondii positive). Results. Grey matter (GM) volume was reduced in schizophrenia patients compared with controls in the cortical regions, hippocampus and in the caudate. In the schizophrenia sample we found a signifi cant reduction of GM volume in T. gondii positive comparing with T. gondii -negative patients bilaterally in the caudate, median cingulate, thalamus and occipital cortex and in the left cerebellar hemispheres. T. gondii -positive and -negative controls did not differ in any cluster. Among participants seropositive to T. gondii the reduction of GM in the schizophrenia subjects was located in the same regions when comparing the entire sample (11,660 over-threshold voxels ( P  0.05, FWR corrected). The differences between T. gondii -negative patients and controls consisted only of 289 voxels in temporal regions. Conclusions. Our study is the fi rst to document that latent toxoplasmosis reduces GM in schizophrenia but not in controls.

Tagged: latent toxoplasmosis, magnetic resonance imaging, Schizophrenia, Toxoplasma gondii, voxel-based-morphometry (VBM)

Mental health

Topics

  • Behavior 105
  • Cognitive functions 64
  • Mental health 439
  • Morphology 6
  • Motor functions 10
  • Personality 36
  • Physical health 134
  • Reproduction 36
  • Reviews 40
  • Sensory functions 3
  • Uncategorized 2

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