OBJECTIVES: To describe our experience with acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM), focusing on (1) the relationship between clinical course and MRI findings and (2) the response to plasmapheresis in a subgroup of patients. METHODS: A retrospective record review was conducted of 13 children who were admitted as inpatients with the diagnosis of ADEM during the period 1998-2003. RESULTS: Diagnosis was established by clinical signs and symptoms, cerebrospinal fluid changes and multifocal involvement of deep gray and white matter based on MRI. Initial therapy was high-dose methylprednisolone and intravenous immunoglobulin in 12 patients. One child improved spontaneously. Six of 12 children did not improve with corticosteroid treatment. All 6 had an acute progressive course neurologically, and 5 of them also showed a delay in the onset of neuroimaging changes, eventually developing lesions in the deep gray matter and brainstem. This latter group received 5 sessions of plasmapheresis and recovered over the course of several months with varying degrees of residual neurologic deficits. CONCLUSIONS: Presentation of ADEM with delayed development of MRI lesions in deep gray matter and brainstem may herald a prolonged clinical course and lack of response to glucocorticoid therapy. Plasmapheresis might be an effective therapeutic intervention in these patients. The role of plasmapheresis versus corticosteroids and intravenous immunoglobulin as a primary treatment of ADEM needs to be investigated further.
OBJECTIVES: To describe our experience with acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM), focusing on (1) the relationship between clinical course and MRI findings and (2) the response to plasmapheresis in a subgroup of patients. METHODS: A retrospective record review was conducted of 13 children who were admitted as inpatients with the diagnosis of ADEM during the period 1998-2003. RESULTS: Diagnosis was established by clinical signs and symptoms, cerebrospinal fluid changes and multifocal involvement of deep gray and white matter based on MRI. Initial therapy was high-dose methylprednisolone and intravenous immunoglobulin in 12 patients. One child improved spontaneously. Six of 12 children did not improve with corticosteroid treatment. All 6 had an acute progressive course neurologically, and 5 of them also showed a delay in the onset of neuroimaging changes, eventually developing lesions in the deep gray matter and brainstem. This latter group received 5 sessions of plasmapheresis and recovered over the course of several months with varying degrees of residual neurologic deficits. CONCLUSIONS: Presentation of ADEM with delayed development of MRI lesions in deep gray matter and brainstem may herald a prolonged clinical course and lack of response to glucocorticoid therapy. Plasmapheresis might be an effective therapeutic intervention in these patients. The role of plasmapheresis versus corticosteroids and intravenous immunoglobulin as a primary treatment of ADEM needs to be investigated further.
Authors: Amy T Waldman; Mark P Gorman; Mary R Rensel; Tracy E Austin; Deborah P Hertz; Nancy L Kuntz Journal: J Child Neurol Date: 2011-04-25 Impact factor: 1.987
Authors: Kevin C O'Connor; Katherine A McLaughlin; Philip L De Jager; Tanuja Chitnis; Estelle Bettelli; Chenqi Xu; William H Robinson; Sunil V Cherry; Amit Bar-Or; Brenda Banwell; Hikoaki Fukaura; Toshiyuki Fukazawa; Silvia Tenembaum; Susan J Wong; Norma P Tavakoli; Zhannat Idrissova; Vissia Viglietta; Kevin Rostasy; Daniela Pohl; Russell C Dale; Mark Freedman; Lawrence Steinman; Guy J Buckle; Vijay K Kuchroo; David A Hafler; Kai W Wucherpfennig Journal: Nat Med Date: 2007-01-12 Impact factor: 53.440