Clinical neuropharmacology
-
Clin Neuropharmacol · Oct 1991
Case ReportsProlonged survival following the inadvertent intrathecal administration of vincristine: clinical and electrophysiologic analyses.
A 23-year-old man with a lymphoblastic lymphoma accidentally received 2.0 mg of vincristine intrathecally instead of intravenously. Although he underwent immediate CSF drainage, symptoms of an ascending myeloencephalopathy developed at 48 h. This progressed to coma, initially with a diffusely slow EEG, which evolved into alpha coma. ⋯ An increase in amplitude in the 10th month was accompanied by the return of some nystagmoid eye movements. The patient's lymphoma then recurred, and further treatment was not attempted. This tragic case, in which transient exposure to a microtubular poison produced severe CNS toxicity, allows some insights into the mechanisms of alpha coma.