language-icon Old Web
English
Sign In

The neurology of enteric disease

2006 
Neurological complications of gastrointestinal, hepatic and pancreatic disease The gastrointestinal and nervous systems are intimately connected. In this article, we focus on the neurological complications of gastrointestinal, hepatic and pancreatic disease in adult patients. Pancreatic function is essential for the maintenance of digestive functioning and hormonal balance. The neurological consequences of diabetes are well known and will be discussed in another review in this series. Hypoglycaemia due to insulinoma may present with a changed conscious level, epilepsy, stroke-like episodes, dementia or psychosis, or neuropathy. Shaw and colleagues1 described a 27-year-old woman with dystonic choreoathetosis. Symptoms and signs may be focal, mimicking structural lesions. Acute pancreatitis can lead to an encephalopathy, characterised by focal signs, cognitive impairment, seizures and hallucinations.2 Cerebral imaging is usually normal. Sudden blindness has also been reported secondary to a retinopathy (Purtscher’s syndrome)3 or optic neuritis.4 Acute pancreatitis may also lead to renal failure and an associated thrombotic microangiopathy characterised by confusion and seizures, and responsiveness to plasma exchange.5 Gross and coworkers6 reported four patients with pancreatitis complicated by severe axonal neuropathy. All these patients, however, required intensive care treatment and had been treated with metronidazole. Vallat and Vital7 reported on a single patient with encephalopathy and axonal neuropathy complicating a severe pancreatitis. ### Malabsorption Malabsorption may occur as a consequence of primary gastrointestinal pathology (eg, coeliac disease) or iatrogenically after extensive resection of the small bowel. Table 1 summarises the neurological consequences of various vitamin deficiencies. View this table: Table 1  Vitamin deficiencies and neurological disease Vitamin B12 deficiency may arise due to poor intake (vegans), malabsorption (fish tapeworm, ileal resection, bacterial overgrowth, tropical sprue and post-gastrectomy states), immune-mediated disease (pernicious anaemia) or rarely as a consequence of genetic disorders that affect transporter proteins.8,9 The neurological complications include a sensory neuropathy, myelopathy, optic …
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    92
    References
    15
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []