1. Severe toxic encephalopathy in a housewife mother by volatile solvents abuse.
- Author
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Hu, Ya-Fei, Li, Jun, Zhu, Si-Huan, Hu, Xiao-Juan, Xia, A-Long, and Chen, Huai-Zhen
- Subjects
SYNDROMES ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,NEUROTOXICOLOGY ,NUCLEAR magnetic resonance spectroscopy ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,NEURODEGENERATION ,BASAL ganglia ,SOLVENTS ,VINYL chloride ,WHITE matter (Nerve tissue) ,METHYLPREDNISOLONE ,DISEASE risk factors ,SYMPTOMS - Abstract
Background: Volatile substance use is an increasing public health issue. Previous studies have always focused on adolescents. However, volatile substance use also occurs in young adults, something we often ignore, especially among housewife mothers. Methods and results: Here, we present a 32-year-old housewife mother with two years of inhaling volatile solvents. She was admitted to our unit for dizziness, slurred speech, and increased sleepiness. Magnetic resonance imaging showed broadly abnormal signals in the brain's bilateral corticomedullary junction, thalamus, basal ganglia, and dentate nucleus. Substance use-induced toxic encephalopathy was diagnosed. Conclusions: No previous reports of toxic encephalopathy due to volatile solvents use in housewife mothers have been made. Awareness of the risks associated with volatile solvents use in housewife mothers is necessary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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