A 10-yr-old boy with Cushing’s disease (CD) suffered an acute ischemic infarction after transsphenoidal surgery. The patient presented with weight gain, poor growth, hypertension, and other classic symptoms of CD. The hypertension was difficult to control despite therapy with multiple agents; blood pressure averaged at 150/90 mm Hg with brief elevations as high as 220/120 mm Hg. Laboratory evaluation revealed classic biochemical features of CD (1); magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain revealed a microadenoma that was removed via transsphenoidal surgery. Two days postoperatively, the patient developed left lower extremity weakness and was lethargic. Postoperative MRI of the brain showed abnormalities typical for acute ischemic infarction using fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) as well as diffusion-weighted imaging; these abnormalities were not present on preoperative MRI (Figs. 1 and 2). He was found to be a carrier of the prothrombin 20210 G-to-A polymorphism but the rest of the workup (including factor V leiden, lupus anticoagulant, protein C, and protein S) was entirely normal. Anticoagulation therapy with heparin was started, followed by aspirin. The patient received physical therapy and was able to ambulate on discharge. By his 8-month visit, the patient had no residual motor deficits. Follow-up MRI revealed minimal scarring 2 yr after the event (Fig. 3), and the patient has fully recovered.
Hypertension is a common feature in children with CD, and conventional antihypertensives may only be partially effective (2,3). CD is also a hypercoaguable state associated with increased incidence of thromboembolic complications, especially after surgery (4). Hypertension is a known major risk factor in cerebral infarctions and may be overlooked in the pediatric population. Annual incidence rates for pediatric arterial ischemic stroke (AIS) have ranged from 0.6–7.9 per 100,000 children per year. AIS is more common in males than females and blacks compared with whites; reported outcomes for AIS in children reveal that on average up to 30% of children were neurologically normal at follow-up (5).
This is the first report of an ischemic stroke in a child with CD. Hypertension and hypercortisolemia were risk factors for the acute ischemic event in our patient. Early recognition and treatment of hypertension in patients with CD is important to avoid possible cerebrovascular complications; the prognosis appears to be good, if recognized and treated early.
Footnotes
This research was supported in part by the Intramural Research Program of the NICHD, NIH.
Disclosure Statement: The authors have nothing to disclose.
Abbreviations: AIS, Arterial ischemic stroke; CD, Cushing’s disease; FLAIR, fluid-attenuated inversion recovery; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging.
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