Late-onset sporadic ataxia, pontine lesion, and retroperitoneal fibrosis: a case of Erdheim-Chester disease

Abstract
A 60-year-old man with progressive gait ataxia and mild pyramidal signs showed at MRI a pontine lesion with post-contrast enhancement in the left middle cerebellar peduncle. Diagnosis of Erdheim-Chester disease (ECD), a rare non-Langerhans cell histiocytosis, was suggested, further supported by a previously diagnosed retroperitoneal fibrosis. X-ray films demonstrated characteristic bilateral and symmetric osteosclerosis of the long bones of the lower limbs, which at radionuclide studies exhibited a marked increase in technetium-99 uptake. A cerebral 18FDG-PET showed a relevant pontine uptake of the tracer. Re-evaluation of a past retroperitoneal biopsy showed an intense CD68+, CD1a-, and S100- infiltrate of histiocytes with foamy cytoplasm, thus confirming the diagnosis. ECD should be regarded as a rare cause of adult-onset sporadic ataxia, especially when pontine lesions and extraneurological manifestations are present.