Ano de Publicação: 2021

AUTORIA

Marcelo Houat de Brito, MD, Marcos Castello Barbosa de Oliveira, MD, Yuri Reis Casal, MD, Andre Neder Ramires Abdo, MD, Leandro Tavares Lucato, MD, PhD, and Mateus Mistieri Simabukuro, MD

 

RESUMO

A 41-year-old man was admitted to the neurology ward due to progressive vertigo and unsteadiness

for the previous 2 months. Neurologic examination was remarkable for a global

cerebellar syndrome. Investigation with brain MRI led to the hypothesis of a histiocytosis due to

infiltrative lesions of the pons, cerebellar peduncles, and pituitary. Therefore, investigation

progressed with chest/abdomen/pelvis CT, bone scintigraphy, and a tibial biopsy that confirmed

the diagnosis of Erdheim-Chester disease (figures 1 and 2, video).

Erdheim-Chester disease is a rare disorder characterized by the infiltration of non-Langerhans

histiocytes in multiple tissues, mainly bone, but with CNS involvement in around 40% of

cases.1,2

 

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