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Posterior Reversible Encephalopathy Syndrome: A Case of Hypercalcemia
Author(s) -
Ana Ponciano,
Vera Beatriz Guirland Vieira,
José Leite,
Célio Fernandes
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
acta médica portuguesa
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.316
H-Index - 21
eISSN - 1646-0758
pISSN - 0870-399X
DOI - 10.20344/amp.9714
Subject(s) - posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome , medicine , encephalopathy , magnetic resonance imaging , radiology
Posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome is an encephalopathy that can be clinically characterized by headache, altered mental status and/or seizures. Neuroimaging demonstrates usually reversible bilateral subcortical vasogenic occipital-parietal edema. Exact pathophysiology remains unclear but is commonly associated with hypertension, renal failure, sepsis and use of immunosuppressive therapy. Its development in the setting of severe hypercalcemia is extremely rare. The authors report a case of posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome in a normotensive patient with severe hypercalcemia as the only identifiable cause.

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