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Transverse Myelitis - Case 3

A 20 year-old woman presented with acute weakness of the right leg and loss of sensation of the left leg (consistent with a Brown-Séquard syndrome).

Outline the Lesion

Transverse Myelitis (TM): (Left) T2-weighted sagittal MRI; (Right) T2-weighted axial MRI at the level of T12. On the axial MRI image, note the area of bright signal in the right half of the lower thoracic spinal cord. A repeat scan two weeks later was completely normal.

TM is an inflammatory and demyelinating disorder of the spinal cord. Symptoms develop acutely over hours to days, resulting in partial or complete spinal cord syndromes with sensory loss, weakness and bladder/bowel disturbance below the level of the lesion. Many cases are associated with significant back or nerve root pain. Most patients make a good recovery although improvement may be delayed for weeks to months. TM is usually idiopathic and typically seen as a delayed autoimmune response to a viral or bacterial infection or an immunization.

Most cases are monophasic and do not recur unless there is an underlying disorder, most often multiple sclerosis (MS) or a connective tissue disease, most notably SLE or Sjögren's syndrome. Thus, while TM may occasionally present as the first attack of MS, the diagnosis of MS should not be made on the basis of one episode of TM unless there have been previous neurological episodes separated by time and space.


Revised 11/29/06
Copyrighted 2006. David C Preston