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October 11, 2005; 65 (7) Articles

Postinfectious inflammatory disorders

Subgroups based on prospective follow-up

E. Marchioni, S. Ravaglia, G. Piccolo, M. Furione, E. Zardini, D. Franciotta, E. Alfonsi, L. Minoli, A. Romani, A. Todeschini, C. Uggetti, E. Tavazzi, M. Ceroni
First published October 10, 2005, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1212/01.wnl.0000179302.93960.ad
E. Marchioni
MD
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S. Ravaglia
MD, PhD
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G. Piccolo
MD
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M. Furione
MD
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E. Zardini
BS
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D. Franciotta
MD
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E. Alfonsi
MD
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L. Minoli
MD
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A. Romani
MD
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A. Todeschini
MD
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C. Uggetti
MD
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E. Tavazzi
MD
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M. Ceroni
MD
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Full PDF
Citation
Postinfectious inflammatory disorders
Subgroups based on prospective follow-up
E. Marchioni, S. Ravaglia, G. Piccolo, M. Furione, E. Zardini, D. Franciotta, E. Alfonsi, L. Minoli, A. Romani, A. Todeschini, C. Uggetti, E. Tavazzi, M. Ceroni
Neurology Oct 2005, 65 (7) 1057-1065; DOI: 10.1212/01.wnl.0000179302.93960.ad

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Abstract

Background: Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM) refers to a monophasic acute multifocal inflammatory CNS disease. However, both relapsing and site-restricted variants, possibly associated with peripheral nervous system (PNS) involvement, are also observed, and a systematic classification is lacking.

Objective: To describe a cohort of postinfectious ADEM patients, to propose a classification based on clinical and instrumental features, and to identify subgroups of patients with different prognostic factors.

Methods: Inpatients of a Neurologic and Infectious Disease Clinic affected by postinfectious CNS syndrome consecutively admitted over 5 years were studied.

Results: Of 75 patients enrolled, 60 fulfilled criteria for ADEM after follow-up lasting from 24 months to 7 years. Based on lesion distribution, patients were classified as encephalitis (20%), myelitis (23.3%), encephalomyelitis (13.3%), encephalomyeloradiculoneuritis (26.7%), and myeloradiculoneuritis (16.7%). Thirty patients (50%) had a favorable outcome. Fifteen patients (25%) showed a relapsing course. Poor outcome was related with older age at onset, female gender, elevated CSF proteins, and spinal cord and PNS involvement. All but two patients received high-dose steroids as first-line treatment, with a positive response in 39 (67%). Ten of 19 nonresponders (53%) benefited from high-dose IV immunoglobulin; 9 of 10 had PNS involvement. The data were not controlled.

Conclusions: A high prevalence of “atypical variants” was found in this series, with site-restricted damage or additional peripheral nervous system (PNS) involvement. Prognosis and response to steroids were generally good, except for some patient subgroups. In patients with PNS involvement and steroid failure, a favorable effect of IV immunoglobulin was observed.

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