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researchsquare; 2022.
Preprint in English | PREPRINT-RESEARCHSQUARE | ID: ppzbmed-10.21203.rs.3.rs-2365233.v1

ABSTRACT

Cerebral infarction is a very rare complication of diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) which is a metabolic disorder caused by insulin deficiency. A previously healthy 6-year-old boy with a newly diagnosed Type 1 diabetes mellitus presented with a severe DKA. The patient, who tested positive for SARS-CoC-2 nasopharyngeal PCR, developed about 72 hours after admission a Parinaud’s syndrome (PS), also known as dorsal midbrain syndrome, which is described as an up-gaze saccadic paresis, a convergence-retraction nystagmus, a light-near dissociation of the pupils and occasionally a lid retraction. The brain magnetic resonance imaging revealed an ischemic infarction in the left thalamus and the thalamo-mesencephalic junction with a slight extension in the midbrain tegmentum. His symptoms improved gradually and at 3-weeks follow-up he had a full neuro-ophthalmological recovery. By describing a Parinaud syndrome as a neuro-ophthalmologic complication in diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) crisis, which, to our best knowledge, has not been described yet, our case expands the knowledge of the neurological manifestations occurring in children during diabetic ketoacidosis and reiterates the importance to keep those patients under strict neurological monitoring for at least 72 hours, especially in severe DKA and to request early brain imaging for any child with neurological deterioration.


Subject(s)
Diabetic Ketoacidosis , Brain Stem Neoplasms , Ocular Motility Disorders , Metabolic Diseases , Diabetes Mellitus , Cerebral Infarction , Neurodegenerative Diseases , Nystagmus, Pathologic , Infarction , Insulin Resistance
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