A patient of migraine-like headache with amnesia, pleocytosis and transient hypoperfusion of cerebral blood flow

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Abstract

Pseudomigraine with pleocytosis (PMP) is an uncommon disease in Japan. The diagnostic criteria include at least one episode of transient neurological deficit accompanied or followed by migraine-like severe headache, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) lymphocytosis, and normal neuroimaging. Both the etiology and the pathophysiology of PMP is not yet well defined. We report a 40-year-old man with a PMP-like syndrome. He came to our clinic because of severe throbbing headache and amnesia, and the examination showed CSF lymphocytosis of 23/mm3, a transient decrease of cerebral blood flow in the left thalamus. All the symptoms were completely resolved within 2 months.

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Tada, Y., Negoro, K., Abe, M., Ogasawara, J. I., Kawai, M., & Morimatsu, M. (2005). A patient of migraine-like headache with amnesia, pleocytosis and transient hypoperfusion of cerebral blood flow. Internal Medicine, 44(7), 743–746. https://doi.org/10.2169/internalmedicine.44.743

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