ABSTRACT
Disulfiram, tetraethylthiuram disulfide, has been used in the clinical treatment of alcoholism since 1948. Aside from the manifestations of a disulfiram-alcohol reaction, disulfiram causes direct toxic side effects including psychiatric, cardiovascular, hematologic and neurologic disorders. The most frequent neurologic side effects are drowsiness, apathy, headache, decreased sexual potency, neuropathy, and optic neuritis. We describe a 26-year-old man who insidiously developed a distal synunetric sensorimotor polyneuropathy after seven years of disulfiram ingestion confirmed by nerve biopsy. He showed nearly complete resolution after the disulfiram was stopped.
Subject(s)
Adult , Humans , Alcoholism , Apathy , Biopsy , Disulfiram , Eating , Headache , Nervous System Diseases , Optic Neuritis , Polyneuropathies , Sleep StagesABSTRACT
Mitochondnal encephalomyopathies are multisysternic diseases affecting predominantly the CNS and skeletal muscLes by mitochondrial dysfunction. Mitochondrial diseases include three distinct syndromes: mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episodes (MELAS): myoclonus epilepsy associated with ragged-red fibers (MERRF):and chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia(CPEO). A characteristic abnormality called "ragged-red fibers" is usually seen on histochemical evaluation of muscle biopsy specimens in these diseases. The characteristic clinical presentations of MELAS are short stature, recurrent stroke like episodes, migraine-like headache, sensorineural hearmg loss, glucose intolerance and neuropathy. We now report a case of MELAS syndrome confirmed by demonstrating "ragged-red fibers" and abnormal mitochondria in muscle biopsy.