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Reversible Splenial Lesion Syndrome (Resles) After Chemotherapy Of Oral Tegafur-Uracil In A Female With Locally Rectal Adenocarcinoma

COGNITIVE AND BEHAVIORAL NEUROLOGY(2020)

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Abstract
A 42-year-old woman with reversible splenial lesion syndrome (RESLES) and rectal adenocarcinoma presented with sudden-onset delirium after the sixth cycle of her chemotherapy drug, oral tegafur-uracil (300 mg/m(2)/day, days 1-14, with treatment cycle repeated every 21 days). Accompanied by the anti-CV2 antibody, paraphasia, and a loss of bimanual coordination, the patient's etiology and clinical manifestations of RESLES are unlike those of other reported cases of RESLES. Tegafur-uracil is an oral fluoropyrimidine that has a similar effect to 5-fluorouracil as an adjuvant treatment for colorectal cancer. The possibility that the toxicity of chemotherapeutic drugs may play a role in the pathogenesis of cytotoxic edema in the splenium of the corpus callosum and extracallosal white matter should be investigated further.
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Key words
RESLES, rectal adenocarcinoma, tegafur, anti-CV2
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