Turkish Neurosurgery
Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy Related İnflammation Presenting As Steroid Responsive Brain Mass
Hakan Silek1, Bahar Erbas2
1Yeditepe University Hospital, Neurology, ISTANBUL,
2Istanbul Bilim University Medical Faculty, Pharmacology, ISTANBUL,
DOI: 10.5137/1019-5149.JTN.22592-18.3

Cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) is a common but often asymptomatic disease, characterized by the deposition of amyloid proteins within brain parenchyma and leptomeningeal-cortical vessels. It can occur as a sporadic disorder or accompany Alzheimer disease (AD). The usual presantation of CAA is spontenous lobar hemorrage, Unlike CAA, cerebral amyloid angiopathy-related inflammation (CAA-ri),a subtype of CAA, can show different presentations and responds to steroid (or immunsupressive) treatment. We report a patient with mixed dementia who showed subacute progression in cognitive impairment and had a mass lesion on the brain (MRI) magnetic resonance imaging. The lesion was identified as CAA related inflammation and the cognitive status of the patient improved significantly after steroid treatment. In this case report, we aimed to emphasize that CAA-ri is one of the possible diagnosis which should be considered in demented patients with rapid cognitive deterioration and showing brain lesions resembling neoplasms on the MRI. Therefore, steroids or the other immunosuppresive treatments, which may lead to a dramatic clinical improvement, could be administred without a delay.

Corresponding author : Hakan Silek