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AIDS and Intracranial Venous Thrombosis

Head Magnetic Resonance Imaging (Panel A)+. enlarge image
Venogram (Panel B). enlarge image

A 43 year old woman with no past medical history presented with 3 weeks of difficulty breathing and reduced exercise tolerance associated with a dry cough, weakness and weight loss. She was diagnosed with PCP and tested positive for HIV. One week later she developed right sided headache associated with right retro-orbital pain, bilateral visual blurring, nausea and vomiting. Results of the lumbar puncture were unremarkable.

Magnetic resonance imaging and venogram of the head revealed

  • extensive thromboses in the superior sagittal and transverse sinuses

  • focal lesion in right caudate,with peripheral enhancement

  • focal lesion in the left thalamus without peripheral enhancement

Hypercoagulable states have been reported in patients with AIDS, including the presence of antiphospholipid antibodies, decreased levels of protein C and protein S, or an increased level of von Willebrand factor. This patient was treated with a course of coumadin and started on antiretroviral therapy with good clinical response.

Reading:

Afsari K, Frank J, Vaksman Y, Nguyen TV. Intracranial venous sinus thrombosis complicating AIDS-associated nephropathy. AIDS Read. 2003 Mar;13(3):143-8.

Iranzo A, Domingo P, Cadfalch J, Sambeat MA. Intracranial venous and dural sinus thrombosis due to protein S deficiency in a patient with AIDS. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 1998 May;64(5):688.

Aboulafia DM, Mitsuyasu RT. Hematologic abnormalities in AIDS. Hematol Oncol Clin North Am 1991;5:195–209.

Abuaf N, Laperche S, Rajoely B, et al. Autoantibodies to phospholipids and to the coagulation proteins in AIDS. Thromb Haemost 1997;77:856–861.

Tsering Yangzom, MD Fellow
Randa Hamadeh, MD, Attending

Bellevue Hospital and Tisch Hospital
New York, NY, 10016