Histopathologic correlates of opioid-associated injury in CHANTER syndrome: first report of a post-mortem examination

Katherine E. Schwetye, Lakshmi Ramachandran Nair, Joseph Boyle, Jed A. Barash

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Opioid-associated brain injury may involve selective regions, including the hippocampi alone, globi pallidi, and cerebellar hemispheres. Opioid-associated amnestic syndrome, for example, is one clinical correlate of hippocampal injury as manifest by MRI abnormality. When all three regions are involved in what may be a more fulminant injury, the syndrome is termed “cerebellar, hippocampal, and basal nuclei transient edema with restricted diffusion (CHANTER)”, initially described in 2019. Until now, to our knowledge, there have been no histopathologic correlates to the imaging findings specifically in CHANTER syndrome. Here, for the first time, we present histopathologic findings of the post-mortem brain from a patient who died from complications of CHANTER syndrome following fentanyl intoxication. These observations included microhemorrhage, reactive and necrotic vasculature, eosinophilic neuronal necrosis, axonal swelling and spheroids, and frank infarction. The findings support previous experimental models implicating both hypoxic–ischemic and cytotoxic mechanisms in the tissue damage associated with CHANTER syndrome, though further work is needed to better characterize the exact cellular pathways involved to develop targeted treatments.

Original languageEnglish
Article number33
JournalActa Neuropathologica
Volume148
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2024

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