Case 1 (CAA-ri):
A 77-year-old woman with hypertension and hyperlipidemia developed several weeks of word-finding difficulty and cognitive decline, followed by acute aphasia and a generalized tonic-clonic seizure. MRI demonstrated left temporal and parieto-occipital vasogenic edema, lobar and punctate frontal microhemorrhages, and bilateral parieto-occipital superficial siderosis. CSF was unremarkable. Brain biopsy revealed perivascular chronic T-cell inflammation with beta-amyloid deposition. She was treated with IV methylprednisolone, oral prednisone taper, long-term mycophenolate, and levetiracetam. At one year, she returned to her baseline cognitive and functional status.
Case 2 (ABRA):
An 84-year-old woman with hypertension and osteopenia had a two-year history of subtle memory decline followed by acute onset of gait difficulty, bilateral leg weakness, and confusion over 48 hours. Exam revealed fluctuating lower extremity strength, abulia, and word-finding difficulty. MRI showed bilateral frontal and parietal edema, cortical subarachnoid hemorrhage, leptomeningeal enhancement, and superficial siderosis. CSF demonstrated lymphocytic pleocytosis with elevated protein. Biopsy revealed destructive vascular inflammation with T-cells, macrophages, B-cell aggregates, and beta-amyloid deposition. She was treated with IV methylprednisolone, oral prednisone taper, mycophenolate, and levetiracetam. Neurological deficits stabilized with recovery of gait, though sleep and mood disturbances persisted.