Coordination and Cognition in Pure Nutritional Wernicke's Encephalopathy with Cerebellar Degeneration after COVID-19 Infection: A Unique Case Report

J Clin Med. 2023 Mar 27;12(7):2511. doi: 10.3390/jcm12072511.

Abstract

Background: Alcoholic cerebellar degeneration is a restricted form of cerebellar degeneration, clinically leading to an ataxia of stance and gait and occurring in the context of alcohol misuse in combination with malnutrition and thiamine depletion. However, a similar degeneration may also develop after non-alcoholic malnutrition, but evidence for a lasting ataxia of stance and gait and lasting abnormalities in the cerebellum is lacking in the few patients described with purely nutritional cerebellar degeneration (NCD).

Methods: We present a case of a 46-year-old woman who developed NCD and Wernicke's encephalopathy (WE) due to COVID-19 and protracted vomiting, resulting in thiamine depletion. We present her clinical course over the first 6 months after the diagnosis of NCD and WE, with thorough neuropsychological and neurological examinations, standardized clinical observations, laboratory investigations, and repeated MRIs.

Results: We found a persistent ataxia of stance and gait and evidence for an irreversible restricted cerebellar degeneration. However, the initial cognitive impairments resolved.

Conclusions: Our study shows that NCD without involvement of alcohol neurotoxicity and with a characteristic ataxia of stance and gait exists and may be irreversible. We did not find any evidence for lasting cognitive abnormalities or a cerebellar cognitive-affective syndrome (CCAS) in this patient.

Keywords: COVID-19; Korsakoff’s syndrome; Wernicke’s encephalopathy; alcoholic cerebellar degeneration; cerebellar atrophy; cerebellar cognitive affective syndrome; cerebellar disfunction; neuropsychology; nutritional cerebellar degeneration; thiamine deficiency.

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding.