Vision Threatening Raised Intracranial Pressure Associated with Recreational Nitrous Oxide Use

Aimee Goel, Pavan s. Khatkar, Jenny l. Hepschke, Athanasios Zisakis, Susan p. Mollan

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Abstract

Nitrous oxide is used as an anaesthetic and analgesic agent in the medical setting and is known to cause raised intracranial pressure. The use of nitrous oxide recreationally for the drug’s euphoric and relaxant properties has been linked to multiple neurological and psychiatric sequelae including neuropathy, myelopathy, and psychosis. We describe a case of a young person who declared heavy nitrous oxide use resulting in vision-threatening papilloedema secondary to raised intracranial pressure. He underwent emergency lumbar drainage alongside high-dose acetazolamide and parenteral vitamin B12 injections. To our knowledge, there have yet to be other reports of cases where heavy nitrous oxide use has caused secondary pseudotumor cerebri syndrome.
Original languageEnglish
Number of pages8
JournalNeuro-Ophthalmology
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 26 Jan 2024

Keywords

  • Chronic abuse
  • illicit drug
  • laughing gas
  • nitrous oxide
  • raised intracranial pressure
  • recreational use
  • papilloedema

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