Neurological paradox during treatment in a non-HIV patient with pulmonary tuberculosis: A case report

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Abstract

Rationale: To report neurological paradox in a non-HIV patient with pulmonary tuberculosis. Patient concerns: A 26-year-old non-human immunodeficiency virus immunosuppressed female patient presented with diffused headache, diplopia, ascending paraparesis with loss of bowel and bladder control. Diagnosis: Disseminated neurological paradoxical reaction developed during tuberculosis treatment in a non-human immunodeficiency virus patient. Intervention: High-dose intravenous corticosteroid was added to the anti-tuberculous drugs, followed by tapered dose of oral prednisolone in 3 months. Outcome: A favorable neurological outcome was obtained 6 months later. Lessons: Neurological paradoxical reaction cannot be overlooked among the tuberculosis-treated cases who present with newly emerged neurological disorders.

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Amornpojnimman, T., Srisilpa, S., & Sathirapanya, P. (2022). Neurological paradox during treatment in a non-HIV patient with pulmonary tuberculosis: A case report. Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Medicine, 15(10), 474–476. https://doi.org/10.4103/1995-7645.356995

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