Transverse myelitis

Background

  • Inflammatory disorder that involves a complete transverse section of the spinal cord
    • Results from viral infection (30% of cases), postvaccination or as part of MS, SLE, or cancer
  • May present exactly like a compressive lesion of the spinal cord
  • Usually thoracic origin, rarely cervical spine

Clinical Features

  • Rapidly progressive paraplegia (as little as 4 hours), but may progress over days-weeks
  • Neck or back pain + neuro complaints:
    • Bilateral motor, sensory (burning or tingling pain), and autonomic disturbances
    • Fecal/urinary retention and incontinence

Differential Diagnosis

Weakness

Lower Back Pain

Evaluation

  • Neurologic findings that are consistent with epidural compression but normal MRI
  • Must rule-out compressive lesion of the cord
  • MRI
    • May show cord swelling
    • Hyperintense lesion on T2 weighted images
  • LP
    • Contains monocytes, protein content is slightly increased, and IgG index is elevated[1]

Management

  • Foley for bladder decompression
  • Consider work up for clotting disorder for spinal artery thrombosis, drug user, risk for aortic dissection
  • Neurological consultation
  • Admit for corticosteroids and plasma exchange
  • The more rapid the progression is, the worse the prognosis

References

  • Perron AD, Huff JS. “Spinal Cord Disorders,” in Rosen’s Emergency Medicine Concepts and Clinical Practice, edited by Marx JA, Hockberger RS, Walls RM, et al., 1389-1395. Philadelphia: Mosby, 2010.
    This article is issued from Wikem. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.