Searchable abstracts of presentations at key conferences in endocrinology
Endocrine Abstracts (2020) 69 P47 | DOI: 10.1530/endoabs.69.P47

SFENCC2020 Society for Endocrinology National Clinical Cases 2020 Poster Presentations (72 abstracts)

Fact or fiction? A discussion on the subject of Hashimoto's Encephalopathy and presentation of a case study

Jena Mamdani , Sarah Chatharoo & Pankaj Chaturvedi


Doncaster and Bassetlaw Teaching Hospitals, Doncaster, UK


Case history: A 35-year-old female presented to a district general hospital with convulsive status epilepticus. In the two weeks preceding the seizure, she complained of migrainous-type headaches, transient aphasia and ataxia. Her general practitioner organised a confusion screen, revealing hypothyroidism and commenced levothyroxine 50 μg. She had no other medical history and denied illicit drug use or alcohol-excess. Examination revealed mild pyrexia (38.2°C), clonus and brisk reflexes. Following termination of seizures, the patient was intubated.

Investigations: Admission bloods and arterial gases found no abnormality other than raised c-reactive protein (35.1 mg/l). Chest X-ray, CT head and MRI head/neck were reported normal. Lumbar puncture found normal opening pressure, clear fluid and high-normal protein on analysis with negative viral polymerase-chain-reaction studies. Further bloods on day two revealed hypothyroidism (thyroid stimulating hormone 13.2 mU/l, free-thyroxine 13.8 pmol/l), low vitamin-B12 (129.0 ng/l) and low folate (3.0 ug/l). Complement and auto-antibody screen found anti-thyroid peroxidase levels of 1130.0 IU/l.

Treatment: Prior to cerebro-spinal fluid (CSF) analysis, the patient received 24 h of intravenous aciclovir. On ITU, her condition rapidly improved and she was extubated just 40 h post-intubation. A diagnosis of Hashimoto’s Encephalopathy (HE) was suspected by neurologists and levothyroxine was increased to 100 μg. Following extubation, intravenous co-amoxiclav was commenced for aspiration pneumonia and hydroxocobalamin was administered. On day three, she was remarkably well and discharged home.

Conclusions: Brain et al. [1] first described HE in 1966 following a case of neuropsychiatric impairment in a middle-aged man with Hashimoto’s thyroiditis. Since then, there have been over 100 published case studies [2]; although pathophysiology of the condition is still poorly understood. HE is a rare diagnosis, predominantly affecting middle-aged women with a sub-acute onset over weeks [3]. A 2011 systematic review of reported cases found seizures (60%), myoclonus (65%), transient aphasia (80%) and ataxia (65%) were the most common presentations of the disease [2]. The diagnosis is one of exclusion in addition to some key diagnostic features including high titres of anti-thyroid antibodies in serum/CSF, encephalopathy and rapid response to steroids [4]. However, spontaneous recovery has been reported in over ten cases [2]. We explore the controversies surrounding a diagnosis of HE, draw parallels and review differences in our case study compared to the current literature and discuss key learning points.

Volume 69

National Clinical Cases 2020

London, United Kingdom
12 Mar 2020 - 12 Mar 2020

Society for Endocrinology 

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