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Discriminating Long Myelitis of Neuromyelitis Optica from Sarcoidosis
Ann Neurol 79:437-447, Flanagan, E.P.,et al, 2016
See this aricle in Pubmed

Article Abstract
We studied 71 patients (NMOSD, 37; SCS, 34). Sixteen (47%) SCS cases were initially diagnosed as NMOSD or idiopathic transverse myelitis. Median delay to diagnosis was longer for SCS than NMOSD (5 vs 1.5 months, p<0.01). NMOSD myelitis patients were more commonly women, had concurrent or prior optic neuritis or intractable vomiting episodes more frequently, had shorter time to maximum deficit, and had systemic autoimmunity more often than SCS (p<0.05). SCS patients had constitutional symptoms, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) pleocytosis, and hilar adenopathy more frequently than NMOSD (p<0.05); CSF hypoglycorrhachia (11%, p=0.25) and elevated angiotensin-converting enzyme (18%, p = 0/30) were exclusive to SCS. Dorsal cord subpial gadolinium enhancement extending �2 vertebral segments and persistent enhancement <2 months favored SCS, and ringlike enhancement favored NMOSD (p<0.05). Maximum disability was similar to both disorders. SCS is an under-recognized cause of longitudinally extensive myelitis that commonly mimics NMOSD. We identified clinical, laboratory, systemic, and radiologic features that, taken together, help discriminate SCS from NMOSD.
 
Related Tags
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angiotensin-converting enzyme
delay in diagnosis
differential diagnosis
heralding manifestation
hypoglycorrhachia
lymphadenopathy
lymphadenopathy,hilar
mimics
misdiagnosis
MRI,abnormal
MRI,contrast enhanced
MRI,spinal cord
MRI,spinal cord,increased intramedullary cord signal
myelitis
myelitis,longitudinal
myelitis,transverse
neuromyelitis optica (Devic's disease)
neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder
pleocytosis of cerebrospinal fluid
sarcoidosis
sarcoidosis,CNS
spinal cord,biopsy
spinal cord,dorsal subpial enhancement
spinal cord,lesion of
treatment of neurologic disorder

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