Posterior Reversible Encephalopathy Syndrome (PRES)
Posterior Reversible Encephalopathy Syndrome (PRES) is a clinicoradiological syndrome characterized by:
- Acute neurological symptoms
- Vasogenic cerebral edema (predominantly posterior circulation territory)
- Reversible changes on neuroimaging
It is not always posterior and not always reversible
- Frontal lobes may be involved
- Basal ganglia involvement possible
- Brainstem and cerebellar involvement possible
- Can even be unilateral
Pathophysiology of PRES
Two major competing (but complementary) theories:
1️⃣ Failure of Cerebral Autoregulation (Hyperperfusion Theory)
When BP exceeds autoregulatory limits:
- Loss of arteriolar vasoconstriction
- Hyperperfusion
- Blood–brain barrier breakdown
- Extravasation of plasma → vasogenic edema
Posterior circulation more vulnerable because:
- Less sympathetic innervation
- Vertebrobasilar system less protected
2️⃣ Endothelial Dysfunction Theory (More accepted in ICU patients)
Seen in:
- Sepsis
- Cytotoxic drugs
- Eclampsia
- Transplant patients
Mechanism:
- Endothelial activation
- Capillary leakage
- Vasogenic edema
- Sometimes microthrombosis
Etiology & Risk Factors
1️⃣ Hypertensive Emergencies
- Malignant hypertension
- Rapid BP fluctuations
2️⃣ Eclampsia / Preeclampsia
- Classic board question
3️⃣ Sepsis / Septic Shock
- Endothelial injury
- Cytokine storm
4️⃣ Renal Failure
- Fluid overload
- Uremia
- Dialysis disequilibrium
5️⃣ Immunosuppressive Drugs
- Cyclosporine
- Tacrolimus
- Chemotherapy
- Anti-VEGF agents
6️⃣ Autoimmune Disease
- SLE
- TTP
Clinical Presentation
Classic Tetrad
- Headache (throbbing)
- Seizures (often generalized tonic–clonic)
- Visual disturbances
- Altered sensorium
Detailed Symptomatology
|
Feature |
Explanation |
|
Seizures |
Most common presentation (~60–80%) |
|
Cortical blindness |
Occipital involvement |
|
Visual hallucinations |
Parieto-occipital cortex |
|
Confusion |
Diffuse involvement |
|
Status epilepticus |
ICU presentation |
|
Focal deficits |
If hemorrhage present |
Imaging
CT Brain(Not sensitive)
- May be normal early
- Hypodensities in posterior regions
MRI Brain
Typical Findings:
- Bilateral symmetrical
- Parieto-occipital white matter hyperintensity
- FLAIR hyperintensity
- No restricted diffusion (vasogenic, not cytotoxic)
DWI / ADC Pattern
- Vasogenic edema → ↑ ADC
- Cytotoxic edema → ↓ ADC (poor prognosis)
Important differentiation from ischemic stroke.
Atypical Imaging Patterns
- Frontal lobe involvement
- Basal ganglia involvement
- Brainstem involvement
- Hemorrhagic PRES (15–20%)
Differential Diagnosis
|
Condition |
Key Differentiator |
|
Ischemic stroke |
Diffusion restriction |
|
RCVS(Reversible Cerebral Vasoconstriction Syndrome) |
Thunderclap headache + angiographic vasospasm |
|
CNS vasculitis |
Vessel wall enhancement |
|
Encephalitis |
CSF abnormal |
|
Toxic leukoencephalopathy |
Drug exposure history |
Critical Care Management
Step 1: Control Blood Pressure
Goal:
- Reduce MAP by 20–25% in first hour
- Avoid rapid overcorrection
Preferred agents:
- Nicardipine infusion
- Labetalol infusion
Avoid:
- Nitroprusside (↑ ICP risk)
Step 2: Seizure Management
Follow status epilepticus protocol:
- Benzodiazepines
- Levetiracetam (preferred in ICU)
- Valproate (avoid in liver failure)
- Phenytoin (less preferred)
Long-term AED usually not required if reversible.
Step 3: Remove Trigger
- Stop offending drug (tacrolimus, cyclosporine)
- Deliver fetus in eclampsia
- Treat sepsis aggressively
- Dialysis optimization in renal failure
Step 4: ICP Control (if needed)
- Head elevation
- Osmotherapy (mannitol / hypertonic saline)
- Controlled ventilation if intubated
Complications
- Intracerebral hemorrhage
- Status epilepticus
- Brain herniation (rare)
- Persistent deficits (if delayed treatment)
Is It Always Reversible?—>No.
Reversibility depends on:
- Early recognition
- Prompt BP control
- Removal of trigger
- Absence of cytotoxic edema
Poor prognostic markers:
- Diffusion restriction
- Brainstem involvement
- Severe hypertension
- Delayed management
Prognosis
- Most improve within 1 week
- Radiological resolution within weeks
- Mortality: ~5–15% in ICU cohorts
- Recurrence possible
PRES vs RCVS
|
Feature |
PRES |
RCVS |
|
BP |
High |
Often normal |
|
Headache |
Gradual |
Thunderclap |
|
Angiography |
Normal |
Segmental vasoconstriction |
|
Edema |
Vasogenic |
Minimal |
|
Trigger |
HTN, drugs |
Postpartum, vasoactive drugs |
Reversible Cerebral Vasoconstriction Syndrome (RCVS)
