Related to this topic: Equipment | Books | Your Experience | Other resources | Glossaries
Print options:
Other options:
(what's this?)
PatientPlus articles are written for doctors and so the language can be technical. However, some people find that they add depth to the articles found in the other sections of this website which are written for non-medical people.
Marchiafava-Bignami Syndrome
First described by Marchiafava and Bignami (2 Italian pathologists) in 1903. A progressive neurological disease most frequently seen in middle-aged or elderly alcoholic males. Degeneration, usually uniform, of the middle portion (middle lamina) of the myelinated fiber tracts of the corpus callosum occurs.1
- About 150 cases have been reported.
- Many cases may go undetected, with clinical features merging with other underlying alcohol-related problems.
Risk Factors
Most cases have been reported in:
- Aged over 45 years
- Male
- Alcoholic
- Most patients have a history of alcoholism and poor nutrition.
- Onset may be sudden with stupor, coma or seizures.
- Other patients present with acute or chronic dementia and/or gait problems. Spasticity often complicates the gait disorder.
- Psychiatric disturbances include incontinence, hemiparesis, aphasia, and apraxia.
Signs
- Usually non-specific.
- General disheveled condition suggestive of chronic alcohol problems.
- May be lethargic, stuporous, or even unconscious (coma or seizures).
- Inability to retain new information, Korsakoff syndrome, alcoholic neuropathy and delirium tremens suggestive of alcoholism.
- Dementia and aphasia may occur.
- Tremors, weakness, spasticity, and gait abnormalities may also be present.
- Other brain lesions associated with alcoholism, e.g. Wernicke's encephalopathy, hepatocerebral degeneration, head trauma, central pontine myelinolysis and pellagra.2
- Non-specific neuropsychiatric symptoms require differentiation from encephalitis and other causes of encephalopathy.3
- CT scan: may show callosal damage but changes may be mild and not detected.
- MRI: may be necessary to clearly delineate the problem.4
- EEG: to evaluate seizures.
- Neuropsychological testing: can demonstrate difficulties with information transfer between the right and left brain.
- No specific treatment is available.
- Management of other alcohol related problems: thiamine, rehabilitation.
- Before CT scans, almost all patients were discovered at autopsy. They had usually died from alcohol-related problems and had had severe neuropsychological deficits prior to death.
- CT and MRI scanning allow detection of milder cases, and some patients have recovered with minimal deficits.5
- In those with alcoholism, the prognosis is poor unless the patient adheres to an alcohol treatment program.
Prevention of alcohol-related problems through education and mental health support.
Document References
- Berek K, Wagner M, Chemelli AP, et al; Hemispheric disconnection in Marchiafava-Bignami disease: clinical, neuropsychological and MRI findings. J Neurol Sci. 1994 May;123(1-2):2-5. [abstract]
- Charness ME; Brain lesions in alcoholics. Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 1993 Feb;17(1):2-11. [abstract]
- Shiota J, Kawamura M, Hirayama K, et al;
Rinsho Shinkeigaku. 1989 Jun;29(6):701-6. [abstract] - Chang KH, Cha SH, Han MH, et al; Marchiafava-Bignami disease: serial changes in corpus callosum on MRI. Neuroradiology. 1992;34(6):480-2. [abstract]
- Navarro JF, Noriega S;
Rev Neurol. 1999 Mar 1-15;28(5):519-23. [abstract]
Internet and Further Reading
- Berman SA; Marchiafava-Bignami Disease. eMedicine, February 2007.
DocID: 2434
Document Version: 20
DocRef: bgp1259
Last Updated: 27 Mar 2007
Review Date: 26 Mar 2009
Disclaimer: Patient UK has no control of the content of the above links. Inclusion does not imply endorsement by Patient UK.
Related pages in Patient UK
Your Experience (^ top of page)
Please add your experience about this condition / medicineOther - Useful resources (^ top of page)
Pictures, diagrams, photos, images, etc.Evidence based medicine
Online textbooks and journals
A-Z of UK Guidelines
A-Z of Online Videos
Medline
Other good health sites
*** NEW *** Patient UK Newspaper
View current health newsMedical equipment products related to this topic (^ top of page)

Books related to this topic (^ top of page)

Want to search some more? Use the Google Search box below to search our site.

Would you like to try our advanced on-line knowledge support system designed to provide professionals with relevant up to date information about recognition and management of disease or take the Mentor Challenge?
Disclaimer: Patient UK has no control of the content of the above links. Inclusion does not imply endorsement by Patient UK.
