key: cord-0717315-651z12vh authors: Yousaf, Zohaib; Siddiqui, Mohammed Yaseen Ahmed; Mushtaq, Kamran; Feroz, Sayeda Efath; Abou Kammar, Shady; Mohamedali, Mohamed Gaafer Hussein; Chaudhary, Haseeb title: Avoiding Anchoring Bias in the Times of the Pandemic! date: 2020-10-09 journal: Case Rep Neurol DOI: 10.1159/000509345 sha: c79c4dfbe682ee73c59ec33525a0f52e5694dbdc doc_id: 717315 cord_uid: 651z12vh COVID-19 has a broad spectrum of clinical presentations, including central nervous system manifestations that are not uncommon. The high pretest probability of COVID-19 in pandemic can lead to anchoring. We present a patient of COVID-19 pneumonia who presented with dyspnea and acute confusional state. His initial workup was suggestive of tuberculous meningoencephalitis with lymphocytic pleocytosis, high protein in CSF analysis, and suspicious MRI findings, which was later confirmed with a positive CSF culture. To the best of our knowledge, it is the first such case. Anchoring to the diagnosis of COVID-19 may deter clinicians from considering other concurrent diagnoses and a poor outcome consequently. Anchoring is a cognitive bias whereby an individual depends too heavily on the initial piece of information when making decisions. In the current pandemic, many places have dedicated healthcare facilities for managing COVID-19 patients, which leads to a predisposition to anchoring bias. COVID-19 presents with a myriad of presentations that mainly include respiratory, cardiac, neurological, and gastrointestinal symptoms. Evidence continues to emerge, linking the role of COVID-19 to creating a prothrombotic and inflammatory state that causes numerous central nervous system (CNS) complications like a cerebrovascular accident, Guillain-Barré syndrome, acute transverse myelitis, and acute encephalitis [1] . Other reports of CNS infections have been limited to one case presenting with seizures, MRI changes, and positive RT-PCR for SARS-COV-2 in the CSF of the patient [2] . Another case report describes a COVID-19 patient with altered sensorium and psychiatric symptoms [3] . We present a case of confirmed COVID-19 pneumonia with concurrent neurological symptoms secondary to tuberculous meningoencephalitis. A 20-year-old Nepalese man, previously fit and well, presented with a 1-day history of abnormal behavior. He had a 1-week history of fever, cough, nausea, and vomiting. Upon initial presentation, he was febrile (38.5°C) and tachypneic (24/min), but otherwise hemodynamically stable with normal oxygen saturation on ambient air. Neurological examination showed a GCS of 12/15 and nuchal rigidity with a positive Kernig and Brudzinski sign. The chest examination was remarkable for bilateral basal crackles. The initial basic lab workup was unrevealing (as shown in Table 1 ). A chest X-ray revealed increased bilateral bronchovascular markings, but no organized infiltrates. He received a meningeal dose of ceftriaxone and acyclovir based on local empiric treatment guidelines for meningoencephalitis. An urgent CT of the brain did not show any acute intracranial pathology or old granulomatous lesions. Lumbar puncture revealed lymphocytic pleocytosis with low glucose of 1.5 mmoL and high protein of 1.95 g/L (as shown in Table 2 ). AFB smear and tuberculosis PCR from CSF was negative. Quantiferon Gold for tuberculosis was indeterminate. HIV 1 and 2 serology tests were negative. Due to the high index of suspicion for tuberculous meningitis based on CSF analysis, the patient was started on anti-tubercular treatment with isoniazid, rifampicin, ethambutol, and pyrazinamide along with dexamethasone. Subsequently, an MRI of the brain revealed multiple ring-enhancing lesions consistent with tuberculomas and leptomeningeal enhancement suggestive of granulomatous meningoencephalitis (Fig. 1) . His nasopharyngeal swab was positive for COVID-19 RT-PCR, and he received treatment with hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin as per local guidelines with a normal QTc. The patient started to improve clinically on the 5th day of hospitalization. His tuberculosis culture from the CSF was positive on the 17th day of incubation. The patient's COVID-19 symptoms and tuberculous meningoencephalitis dramatically improved; therefore, the plan was to complete the total duration of anti-tuberculous drugs by tapering of steroids as per local guidelines. COVID-19 is caused by the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-COV-2). Its clinical presentation commonly includes fever, cough, fatigue, anorexia, and myalgia [4] . Chemosensory dysfunction, e.g., anosmia and dysgeusia, have also been reported [5] . In addition to the respiratory system, gastrointestinal and cardiology involvement is also seen [6, 7] . Neurological involvement in SARS-COV-2 is not uncommon. A retrospective analysis of 214 patients by Mao et al. [8] showed neurological involvement of up to 40%, which was more common in severe cases, 14% had an impaired level of consciousness, and 5% of patients had an ischemic stroke. Another prospective case series of 53 patients from France revealed 8 patients that had leptomeningeal enhancement on imaging. The CSF analysis showed no cells with occasional oligoclonal bands and negative SARS-COV-2 RT-PCRs in all patients [9] . Although COVID-19 could explain our patient's clinical presentation, his lumbar puncture analysis was suspicious of tuberculous meningitis. Moreover, the brain MRI showed multiple ringenhancing lesions in the bilateral cerebellar hemispheres and frontonasal regions that were highly suggestive of tuberculomas along with diffuse leptomeningeal enhancement in the midbrain, bilateral cerebellar folia, anterior interhemispheric region, and bilateral frontal sulci more on the right side. Given the findings from CSF analysis and MRI of the brain, anti-tuberculous therapy with dexamethasone was initiated with a decision to see the response to treatment with subsequent imaging. While pulmonary tuberculosis remains the more common presentation of infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis, tuberculous meningitis constitutes about 1% of all cases [10] . The mortality in tuberculous meningitis remains exceptionally high. Clinical response to antitubercular treatment in all forms of CNS tuberculosis is contingent on an early diagnosis before irreversible neurological deficit occurs; therefore, the management strategy should involve an early diagnosis coupled with aggressive treatment [11, 12] . The culture from the CSF analysis confirmed tuberculous infection 3 weeks later. Our patient improved significantly upon the initiation of anti-tubercular treatment with dexamethasone. In the present pandemic, there is a temptation to link the clinical presentation of any COVID-19 patient to its multi-systemic involvement. The authors suggest eliminating the possibility of co-existing infections that may present similarly. Overcoming the anchoring bias can thus affect morbidity and mortality. The patient has given written informed consent to publish this case, including the publication of images. The institute's committee approved the manuscript on human research. We avoid information revealing the subject's identity. The study was conducted ethically in accordance with the World Medical Association Declaration of Helsinki. Approval from the institutional research body: The manuscript has completed the review process by the medical research council of Hamad Medical Corporation, using their online platform "www.abhath.hamad.qa". The ID assigned to the manuscript is MRC-04-20-295, and it has completed the process successfully (https://www.wma.net/policies-post/wma-declaration-of-helsinkiethical-principles-for-medical-research-involving-human-subjects/). 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