Unusual Presentations Accentuating the Diagnostic Confusion of CJD
Katie Weeks1, Chandra Sekhar Mannyam2, Muhammad Bhatti1, Manasa Gunturu3
1University of Mississippi Medical Center, 2University of Mississippi, 3University of MS Medical Center
Objective:

To report an unusual case of Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD) presenting with worsening extrapyramidal symptoms preceding the onset of cognitive dysfunction. 

Background:

CJD is a fatal progressive neurodegenerative disease mediated by misfolded proteins or prions. While definitive diagnosis requires histopathological confirmation, diagnostic criteria exist to predict the disease antemortem. However, only a few patients with CJD meet all components of this criteria.  
 

Design/Methods:
N/A
Results:

A 71-year-old healthy female presented with 2-months of recurrent falls and intermittent jerking of left arm and leg that started 5 days after her COVID-19 vaccine booster. At baseline she lives by herself and can manage her 10-acre property. On exam, she has appropriate mood, intact cognition, and orientation. Speech was dysarthric and was rigid in all muscle groups associated with hyperreflexia. The intermittent left hemibody jerking was consistent with focal myoclonus associated with spike and wave discharges on EEG. Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed increased signal in the bilateral caudate, putamen, medial thalami, and right cerebral cortex on diffusion-weighted imaging. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) analysis showed normal cell count, protein and negative for autoimmune/paraneoplastic antibodies. While in the hospital over a few weeks her symptoms progressed to akinetic mutism, and she developed cognitive dysfunction. Real-time Quaking Induced Conversion (RT-QuIC), T-tau protein, and 14-3-3 protein ultimately resulted positive on CSF confirming diagnosis of CJD. She was discharged home with palliative care.  

Conclusions:

Unusual presentations in a rare fatal condition like CJD can mimic many other neurological conditions at presentation. This can pose challenges in diagnosis and providing the prognosis to the caregivers.  

10.1212/WNL.0000000000203386