A 54-year-old African-American man was brought by police officers to the emergency department (ED) after he called 911 several times to report seeing a Rottweiler looking into his second-story window. At the scene, the police were unable to confirm his story, thought the man seemed intoxicated, and brought him to the ED for evaluation.
The patient reported that he had been drinking the previous evening but denied current intoxication or illicit drug use. He denied experiencing symptoms of alcohol withdrawal.
Regarding his medical history, the patient admitted to having had seizures, including two episodes that he said required hospitalization. He described these episodes as right-hand “tingling” (paresthesias), accompanied by right-facial numbness and aphasia. The patient said his physician had instructed him to take “a few phenytoin pills” whenever these episodes occurred. He reported that the medication usually helped resolve his symptoms. He said he had taken phenytoin shortly before his current presentation.
According to friends of the patient who were questioned, he had had noticeable memory problems during the previous six to eight months. They said that he often told the same joke, day after day. His speech had become increasingly slurred, even when he was not drinking.
Once the patient’s medical records were retrieved, it was revealed that he had been hospitalized twice for witnessed grand mal seizures about six months before his current admission; he had been drinking alcohol prior to both episodes. He underwent electroencephalography (EEG) during one of these hospitalizations, with results reported as normal. On both occasions, the patient was discharged with phenytoin and was instructed to follow up with his primary care provider and neurologist.
The patient, who reported working in customer service, had no known allergies. He claimed to drink one or two 40-ounce beers twice per week and admitted to occasional cocaine use. Of significance in his family history was a fatal MI in his mother. Although the patient denied any history of rashes or lesions, his current delirium made it impossible to obtain a reliable sexual history; a friend who was questioned, however, described the patient as promiscuous.
On initial physical examination, the man was afebrile, tachycardic, and somewhat combative with the ED staff. He was fully oriented to self but only partially to place and time.
His right pupil was 3+ and his left pupil was 2+, with neither reactive to light. He spoke with tangential speech and his gait was unsteady, but no other significant abnormalities were noted. A full assessment revealed no rashes or other lesions.
Significant laboratory findings included a low level of phenytoin, a negative blood alcohol level, presence of cocaine on urine drug screening, and normal levels of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), vitamin B12, and folate. The patient’s serum VDRL (venereal disease research laboratory) titer was positive at 1:256.
Electroencephalography showed diffuse slowing, and brain CT performed in the ED showed atrophy that was mild but appropriate for a person of the patient’s age, with no evidence of a cerebrovascular accident (CVA). Aneurysm was ruled out by CT angiography of the brain. MRI revealed persistent increased signal in the subarachnoid space.
The patient was admitted with an initial diagnosis of paranoid delusional psychosis and monitored for alcohol withdrawal. He was given lorazepam as needed for agitation. Consultations were arranged with the psychiatry service regarding his delusions, and with neurology to determine whether to continue phenytoin.
The patient showed little response during the next several days. Based on positive results on serum VDRL with high titer, the presence of Argyll-Robertson pupils on exam, and his history of dementia-like symptoms, a lumbar puncture was performed to rule out neurosyphilis. In the patient’s cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) analysis, the first tube was clear and colorless, with 72 cells (28% neutrophils, 59% lymphocytes); glucose, 64 mg/dL; and total protein, 117 mg/dL. The fourth tube had 34 cells (17% neutrophils, 65% lymphocytes) and a positive VDRL titer at 1:128. Results from a serum syphilis immunoglobulin G (IgG) test were positive, and HIV antibody testing was nonreactive, confirming the diagnosis of neurosyphilis.
The hospital’s infectious disease (ID) team recommended treatment with IV penicillin for 14 days. Once this was completed, the patient was discharged with instructions to follow up at the ID clinic in three months for a repeat CSF VDRL titer to monitor for resolution of the disease. His prescription for phenytoin was discontinued.
At the time of discharge, it was noted that the patient showed no evidence of having regained cognitive function. He was deemed by the psychiatry service to lack decision-making capacity—a likely sequelae of untreated neurosyphilis of unknown duration.