Progressive neuropsychiatric and brain abnormalities after smoke inhalation.
Journal: 2013/December - BMJ Case Reports
ISSN: 1757-790X
Abstract:
A 46-year-old man inhaled combustible smoke of unknown chemical composition for 15-20 min in an automobile body shop. Within 1 month, he noted headache, sadness, anergia, anhedonia, agitation, poor sleep and impairment of concentration, attention and learning skills. Three years later, mental status examination showed major depression and cognitive disorder manifested by apprehension, continuous sadness, agitation, exhaustion, difficulty with word finding, bradyphrenia, short-term and long-term memory impairment, and judgement impaired by impulsive and affect-laden reactions without reflection. Impairments were noted on neuropsychiatric tests, and positron emission tomography (PET) scan of the brain with (18)F-fluorodeoxyglucose showed globally decreased and heterogeneous metabolic activity in the entire brain. Treatment included sertraline, methylphenidate, valproic acid and topiramate. At 14 years after smoke inhalation injury, he had persistent cognitive impairment. Repeat brain PET scan showed areas of improvement and deterioration. This case shows long-term brain and psychiatric dysfunction resulting after toxic smoke inhalation, with some areas of the brain having progressive deterioration between years 3 and 14 after smoke inhalation.
Relations:
Content
Citations
(1)
References
(3)
Diseases
(2)
Drugs
(6)
Chemicals
(2)
Organisms
(1)
Processes
(3)
Anatomy
(1)
Similar articles
Articles by the same authors
Discussion board
BMJ Case Rep 2012: bcr0220125945

Progressive neuropsychiatric and brain abnormalities after smoke inhalation

Department of Psychiatry, Cooper Medical School of Rowan University, Marlton, New Jersey, USA
Dr Edward Tobe, ten.tsacmoc@ebot.drawde
Department of Psychiatry, Cooper Medical School of Rowan University, Marlton, New Jersey, USA
Dr Edward Tobe, ten.tsacmoc@ebot.drawde

Abstract

A 46-year-old man inhaled combustible smoke of unknown chemical composition for 15–20 min in an automobile body shop. Within 1 month, he noted headache, sadness, anergia, anhedonia, agitation, poor sleep and impairment of concentration, attention and learning skills. Three years later, mental status examination showed major depression and cognitive disorder manifested by apprehension, continuous sadness, agitation, exhaustion, difficulty with word finding, bradyphrenia, short-term and long-term memory impairment, and judgement impaired by impulsive and affect-laden reactions without reflection. Impairments were noted on neuropsychiatric tests, and positron emission tomography (PET) scan of the brain with F-fluorodeoxyglucose showed globally decreased and heterogeneous metabolic activity in the entire brain. Treatment included sertraline, methylphenidate, valproic acid and topiramate. At 14 years after smoke inhalation injury, he had persistent cognitive impairment. Repeat brain PET scan showed areas of improvement and deterioration. This case shows long-term brain and psychiatric dysfunction resulting after toxic smoke inhalation, with some areas of the brain having progressive deterioration between years 3 and 14 after smoke inhalation.

Abstract

*Beck score reported as points (threshold for severe depression, 29; maximum, 63); all other test results reported as percentile or descriptive score.

†Validity of performance supported by memory error patterns.

‡Impaired because of slow-processing speed rather than inaccuracy.

§Validity of performance was supported by two subtests of the Wechsler Memory Scale (third edition) being forced choice tests, which can reveal malingering.

¶Validity of performance supported by UPSIT incorporating a malingering threshold through forced choice response of 25% not approached by the patient.2

Learning points

Footnotes

Competing interests: None.

Patient consent: Obtained.

Footnotes

References

  • 1. Lee HM, Reed J, Greeley GH, et al Impaired mitochondrial respiration and protein nitration in the rat hippocampus after acute inhalation of combustion smoke. Toxicol Appl Pharmacol 2009;235:208–15. [Google Scholar]
  • 2. Doty RL, Frye RE, Agrawal U. Internal consistency reliability of the fractionated and whole University of Pennsylvania Smell Identification Test. Percept Psychophys 1989;45:381–4. [[PubMed]
  • 3. Lee HM, Greeley GH, Jr, Englander EW. Transgenic overexpression of neuroglobin attenuates formation of smoke-inhalation-induced oxidative DNA damage, in vivo, in the mouse brain. Free Radic Biol Med 2011;51:2281–7.
Collaboration tool especially designed for Life Science professionals.Drag-and-drop any entity to your messages.