| Literature DB >> 33868926 |
Chinmay Jani1,2, Alexander Walker1,2, Omar Al Omari1,2, Dipesh Patel2,3, Alejandro Heffess2,3, Edward Wolpow1,2,4, Stephanie Page1,2, Daniel Bourque1,2,5.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: West Nile Virus varies in presentation from asymptomatic to a febrile illness often associated with malaise, weakness and maculopapular rash. West Nile neuro-invasive disease often manifests as meningitis, encephalitis, and less commonly acute flaccid paralysis in a "polio-like" presentation. Acute transverse myelitis (ATM) is a rare manifestation. We present a case of neuro-invasive West Nile Virus infection with radiographic evidence of longitudinally extensive transverse myelitis (LETM), a subset of ATM. CASE NARRATION: A 42-year-old male from Massachusetts presented with progressive asymmetric paralysis of 4 days duration after developing a prodrome of fever, neck stiffness and urinary retention. Physical examination demonstrated asymmetric lower extremity weakness Lumbar puncture revealed lymphocytic pleocytosis with normal protein and glucose and a positive West Nile IgM in CSF (4.89, reference <0.90), and West Nile Virus detected by PCR in CSF. His West Nile serum IgM was 3.03 (reference range <0.90) and IgG was <1.30 (reference range <1.30). MRI of the lumbar spine showed findings consistent with the diagnosis of ATM.Entities:
Keywords: Paralysis; Transverse myelitis; West Nile Virus
Year: 2021 PMID: 33868926 PMCID: PMC8047179 DOI: 10.1016/j.idcr.2021.e01104
Source DB: PubMed Journal: IDCases ISSN: 2214-2509
Fig. 1MRI Thoracic spine demonstrating abnormally increased T2 hyperintensity with expansion as seen on Sagittal T2 (top left) and Sagittal STIR (top right) extending from approximately the T10 vertebral level to the conus medullaris which terminates at approximately L1. Given lack of enhancement as demonstrated by the Sagittal T1 (bottom left) and Sagittal T1 post contrast (bottom right), this is most consistent with cord edema. No convincing evidence of cord signal abnormality above these levels. Considering the normal brain MRI, this abnormality most likely represents acute transverse myelitis.