A Middle-Aged Patient Living with HIV (PLHIV), Presented with Persistent Hiccups, Imbalance, and Multifocal Myoclonus Secondary to Disseminated Tuberculosis

A middle aged male presented with chronic diarrhoea, persistent hiccups and unsteadiness while walking. His illness had subacute onset and progressive course. Clinically patient had cachexia, pallor, oral thrush and hepatosplenomegaly. On neurological examination, he had fine tremors, gait ataxia, and multifocal myoclonus. Investigations revealed normochromic normocytic anemia, transaminitis, hyponatremia and cerebrospinal fluid pleocytosis(lymphocytic predominance). Brain MRI revealed diffuse patchy meningeal enhancement; CECT abdomen showed circumferential bowel wall thickening, hepatosplenomegaly and necrotic lymphadenopathy. CECT chest exhibited mediastinal lymphadenopathy alongwith centrilobular nodular opacities. Sputum GeneXpert® was positive for mycobacterium tuberculosis with sensitivity to rifampicin. His serology for human immunodeficiency virus was positive. He was diagnosed as disseminated tuberculosis with tuberculer meningitis which caused persistent hiccups, gait abnormaliy and multifocal myoclonus. His symptom resolved with anti tubercular therapy. We aim to highlight here that myoclonus is a rare occurrence with tubercular meningitis.

Keywords tuberculous meningitis - disseminated tuberculosis - hiccups - multifocal myoclonus

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