| Literature DB >> 30386288 |
Răzvan Alexandru Radu1,2, Elena Oana Terecoasă1,2, Amalia Ene1, Ovidiu Alexandru Băjenaru1,2, Cristina Tiu1,2.
Abstract
Opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome (OMS) is a very rare condition with different autoimmune, infectious and paraneoplastic aetiologies or in most cases idiopathic. We report the case of a 75-year-old woman who was admitted in our department in early fall for altered mental status, opsoclonus, multifocal myoclonus, truncal titubation and generalized tremor, preceded by a 5 day prodrome consisting of malaise, nausea, fever and vomiting. Brain computed tomography and MRI scans showed no significant abnormalities and cerebrospinal fluid changes consisted of mildly increased protein content and number of white cells. Work-up for paraneoplastic and autoimmune causes of OMS was negative but serologic tests identified positive IgM and IgG antibodies against West Nile virus (WNV). The patient was treated with Dexamethasone and Clonazepam with progressive improvement of mental status, myoclonus, opsoclonus and associated neurologic signs. Six months after the acute illness she had complete recovery. To our knowledge this is the 14th case of WNV associated OMS reported in the literature so far. We briefly describe the clinical course of the other reported cases together with the different treatment strategies that have been employed.Entities:
Keywords: West-Nile encephalitis; West-Nile virus; opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome; outcome; treatment
Year: 2018 PMID: 30386288 PMCID: PMC6198716 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2018.00864
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Laboratory work-up.
| Epstein-Barr Virus antibodies IgG | 594 U/ml | Negative <20 U/ml |
| Epstein-Barr Virus antibodies IgM | <10 U/ml | Negative <20 U/ml |
| Mycoplasma pneumoniae antibodies IgG | <9 U/ml | Negative <9 U/ml |
| Mycoplasma pneumoniae antibodies IgM | <0.9 U/ml | Negative <0.9 U/ml |
| Mycoplasma pneumoniae antibodies IgA | <9 U/ml | Negative <9 U/ml |
| Listeria Monocytogenes IgM/IgG | Negative | Negative |
| West-Nile antibodies IgG | 2.58 | < 1.1 (index) |
| West-Nile antibodies IgM | 4.16 | < 1.1 (index) |
| West-Nile antibodies IgG | 3.25 | < 1.1 (index) |
| West-Nile antibodies IgM | 3.41 | < 1.1 (index) |
| anti-Amphiphysin, anti-CV2, anti-PNMA2, anti-Ri, anti-Yo, anti-Hu, anti-Recoverin, anti-Sox1, anti-Titin | Negative | Negative (Immunoblot) |
| CEA | 5.4 ng/ml | 0 – 5.8 ng/ml |
| α-fetoprotein | 5.8 ng/ml | 0 – 9.5 ng/ml |
| Neuron – specific enolase | 9.95 ng/ml | < 17 ng/ml |
| CA 19-9 | 26.6 U/ml | 0 – 37 U/ml |
| CA 15-3 | 21.5 U/ml | 0 – 23 U/ml |
| CA 125 | 21.7 U/ml | 0 – 35 U/ml |
| Anti-voltage gated K channels antibodies | Negative | Negative |
| NMDA receptor antibodies | Negative | Negative |
| Glutamic Acid Decarboxylase-II antibodies | <5 IE/ml | < 10 IE/ml |
Blood samples collected 8 days after clinical onset;
blood samples collected 14 days after first test.
Clinical, imaging and laboratory characteristics of WNV associated OMS patients.
| Sayao et al. ( | 39 | F | - | Headache, Nausea | 7 days | Opsoclonus, mild left facial palsy, bilateral mild intention tremor of the upper extremities, left arm myoclonus | - | Supportive care | Brain MRI: normal | Resolution of OMS |
| Afzal et al. ( | 43 | F | - | Dizziness | 10 days | Opsoclonus, myoclonus, gait ataxia | 92 WBC | IVIG | Brain MRI: normal | Resolution of OMS after |
| Birlutiu et al. ( | 57 | F | Larynx neoplasm (4 years before) | Dizziness | 2 days | Opsoclonus (persisting during sleep), myoclonus, neck stiffness, ataxia | 49 WBC | IV Dexamethasone Clonazepam Supportive care | Brain MRI: SVD | Died 4 weeks after admission |
| Cooper et al. ( | 48 | F | Endometrial | Confusion | 7 days | Opsoclonus, myoclonus mainly in the lower extremities, later coma | 67 WBC | Plasmapheresis Supportive care | Brain MRI: normal EEG: severe diffuse slowing | Slow resolution of OMS |
| Hébert et al. ( | 63 | F | - | Headache | 5 days | Opsoclonus, | 36 WBC | IVIG | Brain MRI: normal | Rapid resolution of myoclonus |
| Khosla et al. ( | 62 | M | Stage IV non-small cell lung cancer | Fever | 10 days | Neck stiffness Encephalopathy Truncal-limb ataxia Myoclonus Opsoclonus | 17 WBC | Supportive care | Brain MRI: normal | Resolution of OMS after 60 days |
| Alshekhlee et al. ( | 53 | M | Hypertension | Malaise | few days | Neck stiffness, encephalopathy, myoclonus, opsoclonus, intermittent action tremor | 81 WBC | - | EEG: mild slowing of the posterior dominant rhythm | Severe disability after three months |
| Rasmussen et al. ( | 52 | M | - | Fever | - | Myoclonus, Opsoclonus Poor vision | ↑ WBC | Steroids and IgG Rituximab Supportive care | - | Improvement of opsoclonus |
| Shellenback et al. ( | 69 | M | Liver transplant (6 years before) Tacrolimus therapy | Fatigue | 14 days | Myoclonus, | ↑ WBC | Supportive care | Brain MRI: thalamic T2W hyperintensity EEG: diffuse slowing | Discharged from intensive care unit |
| Tan et al. ( | 47 | M | - | Malaise | 10 days | Opsoclonus, | 46 WBC | IV Methylprednisolone 1g/5 days | Brain MRI: normal | Resolution of OMS |
| 47 | F | - | Rash | 7 days | Opsoclonus, | 76 WBC | IV Methylprednisolone 1g/ 5 days | Brain MRI: normal | Resolution of OMS after 30 days | |
| Zaltzman et al. ( | 61 | F | Diabetes Mellitus Obesity Hyperlipidemia Hypertension | Fever | 14 days | Opsoclonus, | 13 WBC | IV Methylprednisolone 1g/ 5 days | Brain MRI: SVD | Resolution of OMS after 90 days |
| 55 | M | - | Fever | 14 days | Myoclonus, | - | - | Brain MRI: SVD | Complete recovery after several months | |
| Our patient | 75 | F | Hypertension | Headache | 5 days | Neck stiffness, | 17 WBC | IV Dexamethasone Supportive care | Brain MRI: SVD | Slow improvement |
EEG, Electroencephalography; MRI, Magnetic Resonance Imaging; SVD, Small Vessel Disease; WBC, White Blood Cells; M, Male; F, Female; WNV-Ab, antibodies against West-Nile Virus; IVIG, intravenous immunoglobulin; OMS, opsoclonus – myoclonus syndrome.