Cyclosporin-associated akinetic mutism and extrapyramidal syndrome after liver transplantation

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Abstract

Three patients developed akinetic mutism on the third day after the introduction of intravenous cyclosporin A, given for immunosuppression after liver transplantation. One patient in addition developed a florid orofacial dyskinesia, which resolved completely, as did the akinetic mutism, after withdrawal of cyclosporin. In these patients the time course of the akinetic mutism and extrapyramidal syndrome, which developed in the absence of any other identifiable cause, suggests cyclosporin A was the precipitating factor. Subsequently, two of the patients showed signs of pseudobulbar palsy with abnormalities in the pons on MRI scanning, suggesting central pontine myelinolysis (CPM). None of the patients had experienced significant fluctuations in serum sodium or other risk factors for central pontine myelinolysis and the exact relationship to the earlier cyclosporin related mutism was not clear.

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Meadows, J., Bird, G., Goka, J., Polson, R., & Williams, R. (1990). Cyclosporin-associated akinetic mutism and extrapyramidal syndrome after liver transplantation. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry, 53(12), 1068–1071. https://doi.org/10.1136/jnnp.53.12.1068

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