pubmed-article:3595454 | pubmed:abstractText | In a 44 year old patient with chronic lymphatic leukemia and secondary antibody deficiency syndrome, a disorder of articulation and a left hemiparesis developed during a thrombocytopenic phase. Computer tomography of the cranium, CSF diagnostics and the electroencephalogram did not provide any indication for the cause of the rapidly progressive cerebral symptoms. In the NMR tomogram, a diffusedly increasing intensity in the T2-weighted tomograms were shown around the central region in the right brain. The patient died of a Pseudomonas septicemia. At autopsy, a typical finding of progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy was found in the areas altered in the NMR tomography. Papova-like virions could be demonstrated in glial cells by electron microscopy. | lld:pubmed |