Background and aim: Severe dysautonomia may be secondary to viral infections, resulting in impaired autoimmune, cardiovascular, urinary, and digestive dysfunction. Herein, we present a case of a 31-year-old white female patient who had severe gastroparesis related to autonomic failure following an episode of acute gastroenteritis. This seems to be the first report providing thorough assessment of the enteric and autonomic nervous system by analysis of full-thickness small intestinal biopsies, cardiovagal testing, and autopsy. Hospital course: This patient affected by a severe gastroparesis was treated with antiemetics, prokinetics, analgesics, and gastric electrical stimulation to control symptoms. Nutritional support was made using jejunal feeding tube and, in the final stage of disease, with total parenteral nutrition. Autonomic studies revealed minimal heart rate variability and a disordered Valsalva maneuver although the enteric nervous system and the smooth muscle layer showed a normal appearance. Hospital courses were complicated by episodes of bacteremia and fungemia. Serum antiphospholipid antibodies were noted but despite anticoagulation, she developed a pulmonary embolism and shortly thereafter the patient died. Autopsy revealed acute hemorrhagic Candida pneumonia with left main pulmonary artery thrombus. Sympathetic chain analysis revealed decreased myelinated axons with vacuolar degeneration and patchy inflammation consistent with Guillain-Barre syndrome. The evaluation of the enteric nervous system in the stomach and small bowel revealed no evidence of enteric neuropathy or myopathy. Conclusion: A Guillain-Barre-like disease with gastroparesis following acute gastroenteritis is supported by physiologic and autonomic studies with histologic findings.
A. Lobrano, K. Blanchard, T.L. Abell, A. Minocha, W. Boone, J. Wyatt-Ashmead, et al. (2006). Postinfectious Gastroparesis Related to Autonomic Failure: A Case Report. NEUROGASTROENTEROLOGY AND MOTILITY, 18, 162-167 [10.1111/j.1365-2982.2005.00728.x].
Postinfectious Gastroparesis Related to Autonomic Failure: A Case Report
BARBARA, GIOVANNI;STANGHELLINI, VINCENZO;DE GIORGIO, ROBERTO
2006
Abstract
Background and aim: Severe dysautonomia may be secondary to viral infections, resulting in impaired autoimmune, cardiovascular, urinary, and digestive dysfunction. Herein, we present a case of a 31-year-old white female patient who had severe gastroparesis related to autonomic failure following an episode of acute gastroenteritis. This seems to be the first report providing thorough assessment of the enteric and autonomic nervous system by analysis of full-thickness small intestinal biopsies, cardiovagal testing, and autopsy. Hospital course: This patient affected by a severe gastroparesis was treated with antiemetics, prokinetics, analgesics, and gastric electrical stimulation to control symptoms. Nutritional support was made using jejunal feeding tube and, in the final stage of disease, with total parenteral nutrition. Autonomic studies revealed minimal heart rate variability and a disordered Valsalva maneuver although the enteric nervous system and the smooth muscle layer showed a normal appearance. Hospital courses were complicated by episodes of bacteremia and fungemia. Serum antiphospholipid antibodies were noted but despite anticoagulation, she developed a pulmonary embolism and shortly thereafter the patient died. Autopsy revealed acute hemorrhagic Candida pneumonia with left main pulmonary artery thrombus. Sympathetic chain analysis revealed decreased myelinated axons with vacuolar degeneration and patchy inflammation consistent with Guillain-Barre syndrome. The evaluation of the enteric nervous system in the stomach and small bowel revealed no evidence of enteric neuropathy or myopathy. Conclusion: A Guillain-Barre-like disease with gastroparesis following acute gastroenteritis is supported by physiologic and autonomic studies with histologic findings.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.