Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis in children: clinical, neuroimaging and neurophysiologic studies.
Słowa kluczowe
Abstrakcyjny
Nine patients below 20 years of age (4 males and 5 females), who were diagnosed to have acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM) by clinical findings and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), were reviewed retrospectively. They ranged from 4 months to 20 years of age with an average of 8.6 years. Seven patients (78%) received neurophysiological studies, which included electroencephalography, multimodality evoked potentials (EPs), nerve conduction velocity and/or F-wave measurement. The presentation symptoms were mainly headache, vomiting, consciousness change and motor deficits. Seven (78%) of nine patients had symptoms preceded by fever or upper respiratory tract infections; one (11%) was preceded by trivalent mumps, measles, rubella vaccination and no definite predisposing factor was found in another. Computed tomography (CT) scans were abnormal in five (71 %) of seven children, while MRI showed multiple lesions in seven (78%) of nine children. The lesions in MRI were mainly in the brainstem (n = 6), basal ganglion (n = 5), thalamus (n = 4), periventricular white matter (n = 4) and cerebellum (n = 4). EPs disclosed spinal cord involvement in all patients who received the examination. Peripheral neuropathy was disclosed in one patient. It was concluded that associated radiculoneuropathy is possible in patients with ADEM. Both MRI and neurophysiologic studies are complementary for diagnosis of ADEM.