Abstract
A 40-year-old man was admitted to the hospital due to both a worsening of symptoms associated with ulcerative colitis (UC), which had been diagnosed 3 years previously, and limb paralysis. Colonoscopy revealed severe pancolitis-type UC. He was diagnosed with cerebral vasculitis with multiple white matter infarctions associated with the disease activity of UC by contrast-enhanced head magnetic resonance imaging. Mesalazine at 4,000 mg/day and prednisolone at 60 mg/day were started, and the prednisolone dosage was thereafter gradually reduced and switched to golimumab. He achieved a long-term remission from UC, and thereafter his neurological abnormalities improved significantly. He had no recurrence of cerebral infarction.
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Yasuda, T., Takagi, T., Hasegawa, D., Hirose, R., Inoue, K., Dohi, O., … Itoh, Y. (2021). Multiple cerebral infarction associated with cerebral vasculitis in a patient with ulcerative colitis. Internal Medicine, 60(1), 59–66. https://doi.org/10.2169/internalmedicine.4951-20
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