Abstract
We report on two children with sepsis-associated encephalopathy. They presented with
fulminant neurological damage on clinical, neuroimaging, and neurophysiological findings.
At onset, both went into deep coma after status epilepticus, resulting in near brain
death. Both patients showed diffuse brain edema on CT and severe brain dysfunction
on electroencephalography within a day of onset. Brain magnetic resonance (MR) imaging
of one patient on day 2 showed restricted diffusion in the basal ganglia and the subcortical
white matter of the frontal and occipital lobes. Brain edema aggravated and lasted
for a few months despite a variety of treatments. MR imaging in the chronic phase
revealed cracking lesions extending to the cerebral white matter, the cerebellum,
and the brainstem. MR angiography showed diminished intracranial major arteries. These
serial neuroradiological findings suggested severe brain damage resulting from fulminant
elevation of intracranial pressure, which mimicked “brain death” or “respirator brain”.
Key words
sepsis-associated encephalopathy - neuroimaging - respirator brain
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Correspondence
Akiko Kondo
Division of Child Neurology
Institute of Neurological Sciences
Faculty of Medicine
Tottori University
36-1 Nishi-cho
680-8504 Yonago
Japan
Phone: +81/859/38 6777
Fax: +81/859/38 6779
Email: holbergs@nifty.com