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Acute flaccid myelitis
From WikEM
Contents
Background
- Polio-like illness, subset of transverse myelitis
- More common in children
- Likely caused by:
- Enterovirus, particularly Enterovirus D68, poliovirus
- West nile virus
- Adenovirus
Clinical Features[1]
- Acute onset, focal weakness of 1 or more extremity
- Decreased muscular tone
- Absent or hypoactive reflexes
- Rarely have numbness, but may have some neuropathic pain
- Fever and other symptoms of infection by causative virus (e.g. URI symptoms, gastroenteritis)
- In severe cases:
- Bulbar dysfunction (dysphagia, dysarthria, dysphonia, facial weakness, ptosis)
- Respiratory muscle weakness
- Autonomic instability, arrythmias if cervical lesion present
- Paralysis usually maximal at 3-5 days after onset
Differential Diagnosis
Weakness
- Neuromuscular weakness
- UMN:
- Spinal cord disease:
- Infection (Epidural abscess)
- Infarction/ischemia
- Trauma (Spinal Cord Syndromes)
- Inflammation (Transverse Myelitis)
- Degenerative (Spinal muscular atrophy)
- Tumor
- Peripheral nerve disease:
- Guillain-Barre syndrome
- Toxins (Ciguatera)
- Tick paralysis
- DM neuropathy (non-emergent)
- NMJ disease:
- Muscle disease:
- Rhabdomyolysis
- Dermatomyositis
- Polymyositis
- Alcoholic myopathy
- Non-neuromuscular weakness
- Can't miss diagnoses:
- ACS
- Arrhythmia/Syncope
- severe infection/Sepsis
- Hypoglycemia
- Periodic paralysis (electrolyte disturbance, K, Mg, Ca)
- Respiratory failure
- Emergent Diagnoses:
- Symptomatic Anemia
- Severe dehydration
- Hypothyroidism
- Polypharmacy
- Malignancy
- Other causes of weakness and paralysis
- Acute intermittent porphyria (ascending weakness)
- Can't miss diagnoses:
Evaluation
- Evaluate for other causes of symptoms (e.g. HSV, bacterial meningitis, Guillain-Barre syndrome)
- CSF: Pleocytosis (WBC count >5 cells/mm3), +/- elevated protein
- MRI: spinal cord lesion, largely restricted to gray matter, spanning one or more spinal segments
Management[2]
- Report suspected cases to CDC/department of health
- Respiratory:
- Consider intubation for airway protection if evidence of bulbar dysfunction
- Consider NIPPV if evidence of respiratory muscle weakness (by clinical exam, hypoxia, hypercarbia, vital capacity <15 mL/kg, or NIF <30)
- Treat neuropathic pain
- Elevate head of bed >30 degrees
- No evidence of benefit from corticosteroids, IVIG, plasmapheresis, or antivirals as of yet
Disposition
- Admit
- Consider ICU admission for:
- Respiratory muscle weakness
- Bulbar weakness causing impaired airway protection
- Altered mental status
- Autonomic instability
- Cervical lesion on MRI
- Rapidly progressive course