A 25-year-old Micronesian patient who presented to the emergency department after an episode of unresponsiveness. Six weeks prior to presentation, they developed a cough and generalized weakness, was treated as a case of pneumonia. Following discharge, they experienced a persistent headache, intermittent fevers, and worsening weakness, and eventually a seizure leading to readmission.
Initial labs were significant for hyponatremia (116 mEq/L) and leukocytosis (16,000/µL). CT scan of the head showed mild ventriculomegaly, and scans of the chest, abdomen and pelvis revealed extensive lymphadenopathy and bilateral ground-glass opacities.
MRI of the brain demonstrated multiple areas of restricted diffusion in the brainstem, thalamus, and basal ganglia, consistent with acute infarcts. Contrast-enhanced images showed basilar leptomeningeal enhancement. Intracranial MR angiography was suggestive of widespread vasculitis.
Cerebrospinal fluid studies included elevated protein (391 mg/dL), low glucose (17 mg/dL), and Lymphocyte predominate pleocytosis 80% (122 WBCs/µL), 11 RBCs/µL, negative meningitis/encephalitis panel by PCR and negative parasitological and fungal tests.