A Rare Neurological Twist in Preeclampsia: Isolated Hypoglossal Nerve Palsy

Neurological complications of preeclampsia are typically central—ranging from seizures to posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome (PRES). Peripheral cranial neuropathies are far less common, and involvement of the hypoglossal nerve (cranial nerve XII) is exceptionally rare.
A Rare Neurological Twist in Preeclampsia: Isolated Hypoglossal Nerve Palsy
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BioMed Central
BioMed Central BioMed Central

Isolated hypoglossal nerve mononeuropathy associated with preeclampsia in late pregnancy: a case report - Journal of Medical Case Reports

Background Neurological complications in preeclampsia are uncommon and typically central in origin. Cranial mononeuropathies, especially involving the hypoglossal nerve, are exceedingly rare. Case presentation We report a case of isolated hypoglossal nerve mononeuropathy in a 31-year-old, Indian, primigravida at 37 weeks of gestation with preeclampsia. The patient presented with mild dysphagia and dysarthria. Neurological examination revealed tongue deviation to the right, suggestive of left hypoglossal nerve mononeuropathy. Magnetic resonance imaging of the brain, including T1/T2-weighted sequences, fluid-attenuated inversion recovery, and diffusion-weighted imaging with apparent diffusion coefficient sequences, and magnetic resonance angiography, followed by contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging of the neck and oral cavity, showed no infarct, hemorrhage, mass lesion, or compressive pathology. The patient was managed conservatively with blood pressure optimization, and symptoms resolved completely within 90 days postpartum. Conclusion At least four cases of hypoglossal nerve mononeuropathy associated with preeclampsia have been reported in literature. This case adds to the emerging evidence that cranial mononeuropathies may represent a rare but important neurological manifestation of preeclampsia and highlights the need for urgent neuroimaging and careful blood pressure control in pregnant and/or postpartum patients presenting with bulbar symptoms.

Case Overview

A 31-year-old primigravida at 37 weeks’ gestation with preeclampsia presented with mild dysarthria and dysphagia. Neurological examination revealed tongue deviation to the right, consistent with a left hypoglossal nerve palsy.

Extensive neuroimaging—including MRI brain, MR angiography, and contrast-enhanced imaging of the neck—demonstrated no infarction, hemorrhage, mass lesion, or compressive pathology, effectively excluding structural and vascular causes.

Management focused on blood pressure optimization and obstetric care, without nerve-specific therapy. The patient experienced complete resolution of symptoms within 90 days postpartum.

Why This Case Matters

Cranial mononeuropathies in preeclampsia are rare but increasingly recognized. This case reinforces several key clinical insights:

Diagnosis of exclusion: Normal imaging is essential to rule out brainstem stroke, skull base lesions, and vascular pathology
Likely mechanism: Microvascular ischemia, endothelial dysfunction, and vasospasm affecting the vasa nervorum
Favorable prognosis: Most cases resolve spontaneously with control of the underlying hypertensive disorder
Clinical vigilance: Bulbar symptoms in pregnancy should prompt urgent neurological and obstetric evaluation
Clinical Take-Home Message

Isolated cranial neuropathies—including hypoglossal nerve palsy—should be considered a rare but reversible neurological manifestation of preeclampsia, particularly in the presence of severe hypertension and normal neuroimaging.


Question

What is the most likely mechanism underlying hypoglossal nerve involvement in preeclampsia?

A. Direct viral infection of the nerve
B. Autoimmune demyelination
C. Microvascular ischemia due to endothelial dysfunction
D. Compressive tumor at the skull base

 

Correct Answer:

C. Microvascular ischemia due to endothelial dysfunction
Explanation: Preeclampsia is characterized by systemic endothelial dysfunction and vasospasm, which can impair perfusion of cranial nerves via the vasa nervorum, leading to transient, reversible mononeuropathies.


  

Final Thoughts

This case is a valuable reminder that not all neurological symptoms in preeclampsia are central. Recognition of reversible peripheral cranial neuropathies can prevent unnecessary interventions and guide appropriate management focused on timely blood pressure control and obstetric care.


 

Journal of Medical Case Reports is the world’s first international, PubMed-listed, medical journal devoted to publishing case reports from all medical disciplines and will consider any original case report that expands the field of general medical knowledge, and original research relating to case reports.

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