Locked-in Syndrome Due to Meningovascular Syphilis: A Case Report and Literature Review

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Abstract

We herein report a 46-year-old man presenting with locked-in syndrome secondary to meningovascular syphilis. Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) demonstrated multiple acute infarctions in the left ventromedial pons, right basis pontis, and left basal ganglia. His locked-in syndrome was hypothesized to have been caused by thrombosis of the small paramedian branches of the basilar artery due to syphilitic arteritis. This is a unique case of bilateral ventromedial pontine infarction caused by meningovascular syphilis that presented as locked-in syndrome. Meningovascular syphilis should be included in the differential diagnosis of uncommon stroke, particularly in young men.

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Yokota, Y., Ishihara, M., Ninomiya, S., Mitsuke, K., Kamei, S., & Nakajima, H. (2022). Locked-in Syndrome Due to Meningovascular Syphilis: A Case Report and Literature Review. Internal Medicine. Japanese Society of Internal Medicine. https://doi.org/10.2169/internalmedicine.8269-21

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