Neuromyelitis optica (NMO) is considered to be a rarer autoimmune disease than multiple sclerosis. It is very difficult to make a diagnosis of MNO for doctors who are not familiar with its clinical features and diagnostic criteria. We report a case of a young female patient who had been suffering motor weakness and radiating pain in both upper extremities. Cervical MRI showed tumorous lesion in spinal cord and performed surgery to remove lesion. We could not find a tumor mass in operation field and final diagnosis was NMO. NMO must be included in the differential diagnosis of lesions to rescue the patient from invasive surgical interventions. More specific diagnostic tools may be necessary for early diagnosis and proper treatment.
Neuromyelitis optica (NMO) is a severe demyelinating syndrome of the central nervous system by attacks of optic neuritis and myelitis
It is very difficult to make a diagnosis of MNO for doctors who are not familiar with its clinical features and diagnostic criteria. Some patients who present motor weakness with contiguous, intramedullary cervical spinal cord lesion without trauma history are misdiagnosed with intraaxial neoplasia of the spinal cord with other progressive disease. Often, when patients' motor weakness is progressive and deteriorated with newly appearing sensory symptoms, doctors, particularly surgeons, are apt to perform surgery
Recent revised diagnostic criteria for neuromyelitis optica include two absolute requirements and 2 out of 3 supportive criteria. The two absolute requirements are optic neuritis and acute myelitis.
The three supportive criteria are contiguous spinal cord MRI lesion extending over ≤3 vertebral segments, brain MRI not meeting the diagnostic criteria for multiple sclerosis (MS), and seropositive NMO-IgG
In most cases of acute neurologic deterioration with contiguous, intramedullary cervical spinal cord lesion, immediate surgical approach and decompression of the lesion are performed. However, when a sufficient and complete diagnosis of the lesion is made, as in our presenting case, decompressive operation can be avoided and achieve a better prognosis.
This 20-year-old woman had no other medical history. The patient had been suffering motor weakness in both upper extremities and radiating pain in both hands since 3 weeks ago. She experienced progression of pain, sensory changes, and lopsided motor weakness to the left side of the body. At the initial physical examination, a motor grade of both upper extremities was determined as grade 4 and no weakness was found in lower extremities. She was generally mildly hypertonic, although there was no Babinski sign or clonus. She complained of mild radiating pain in both hands, which was not one-sided with inexplicit dermatome. The patient underwent brain and whole spine MRI, which revealed a heterogeneously enhancing mass in the central posterior aspect of the spinal cord at the C1-6 level (
We performed C2-6 laminectomy and after opening the dura, the spinal cord was edematous but otherwise normal (
On the first postoperative day, her vital signs were stable, and suffered from nuchal pain, but her motor weakness remained the same. However, from the second postoperative day, motor weakness in both upper extremities became gradually better along with improvement of other sensory symptoms. On the twelfth postoperative day, permanent biopsy revealed abundant histiocytic collection, perivascular lymphocytic inflammation and reactive astrocytic proliferation. There was no evidence of a neoplastic process and no oligoclonal bands. The pathologist strongly suggested the diagnosis of neuromyelitis optica. Only then did we investigate her ophthalmic symptoms with a suspicion of another disease. She recalled her visual disturbance 5 years ago. Since then, there was no symptom until visit our department. We referred her to ophthalmology and revealed optic atrophy with disc pallor with optic neuritis on her left eye. Finally, her diagnosis was determined on NMO.
On the fourteenth postoperative day, her motor grade was improved to grade 5 and the patient could perform her daily tasks including eating food. We continued postoperative steroid treatment and started rehabilitation. After rehabilitation, she regained most of her upper-extremity motor functions and her ability to walk. Her pain significantly disappeared. When she was discharged from the hospital, there remained only mild nuchal pain. After 3 month from surgical intervention, her follow-up cervical MRI showed dramatic improvement (
Many non-neoplastic lesions are misdiagnosis as intramedullary spinal cord tumors through radiographic findings and clinical symptoms. More specifically, the following misdiagnoses are made : infectious disorders (tuberculosis, fungal, bacterial), demyelination (MS), granulomatous disease, vascular lesions and syringomyelias
It is difficult to distinguish these lesions from neoplastic spinal cord tumors from only case history and physical examination
In 1894, Devic described the clinical symptoms of NMO for the first time : optic neuritis and acute transverse myelitis. His patients had monophasic or relapsing courses of neuromyelitis optica
We can typically see central scotoma, although other visual changes such as blindness, bitemporal hemianopsia are also detected by the visual field test in NMO patients
The symptoms of transverse myelitis are para- or tetraparesis below the lesion, an almost symmetrical sensory change and sphincter dysfunction
In our case, the patient's NMO visual symptoms were not clear. Three months later, she said that had experienced visual blurring 3 years-ago. She had normal motor power, no sensory deficit (even nuchal pain), and no visual symptoms.
Most patients with NMO have relapsing episodes of optic neuritis and myelitis, rather than a monophasic course. Relapse occurs within 1 year in 60% of patients and within 3 years in 90%
Recovery is usually incomplete, and most patients follow a course of early irreparable disability due to frequent and severe relapses. Within 5 years of disease onset, more than 50% of patients with relapsing NMO become blind in one or both eyes or require ambulatory help. Risk factors of a poor prognosis are the number of relapses in the first 2 years of disease activity, the severity of the first attack and pre-existing autoimmune disorder.
In studies of broad spectrum NMO related disorders, the 5-year survival rate of NMO was 68%. The most frequent cause of death is neurogenic respiratory failure
Spinal cord lesions contiguous over 3 vertebral levels are the most convincing findings for the diagnosis of NMO, and spinal cord lesions contiguous over 2 more vertebral segments are rarely found in MS
At an early stage of NMO, spinal MRI may show typical patterns of NMO, such as snake-eye or owl-eye indicating spinal artery ischemia
As NMO-IgG, Aquaporin-4 (AQP-4) antibody in the serum is directed against AQP-4, osmosis-driven, and bidirectional water channel expressed on the foot processes of astrocytes in the CNS. Positive for NMO-IgG/AQP4 antibodies secures credible evidence for the diagnosis of NMO (more than half the cases for NMO patients) and is a prognostic factor for high-risk disease
The serum sample was referred by another research institute, but the titer was low and not specific for diagnosis. A diagnosis of non-neoplastic disease on cervical lesion must have underlying laboratory investigations and diagnostic procedures before invasive surgical intervention. However, by the surgeon's inclination, surgery may be considered as an alternative choice of treatment, if the patient's neurologic deficit is rapidly deteriorated. We should closely observe changes of the patient's trivial symptoms and be aware of a minor possibility of rare diseases such as NMO that can cause catastrophic results. Intense studies regarding biomarkers and immunoassay techniques are required for noninvasive, cost-effective diagnosis.
A sudden motor deterioration with contiguous, intramedullary cervical spinal cord lesion could be misdiagnosed as a tumorous condition, but may actually be the symptoms of demyelinating diseases, such as MS and NMO. Early diagnosis and treatment of NMO determine the prognosis and sequelae of the disease. Thus, appropriate diagnosis results in suitable medical treatment (although it may require surgical approach), if careful attention is drawn to clinical clues, including visual symptoms and relapsing neurologic events. NMO must be included in the differential diagnosis of these lesions to rescue the patient from invasive surgical interventions. More specific diagnostic tools may be necessary for early diagnosis and proper treatment.
This work was supported by Dankook University research fund in 2011.
Initial cervical MRI sagittal images show heterogenous enhancement of elongated shaped mass like lesion mimics tumorous condition from C1 to C6 levels. A : T1 weighted image. B : T2 weighted image. C : T1 weighted enhanced image.
Cervical MRI which was performed after neurologic deterioration shows newly appeared enhancing lesion in the anterior aspect of spinal cord from C2 to C4 level. A : T1 weighted image. B : T2 weighted image. C : T1 weighted enhanced image.
Intraoperative picture shows no definite lesion which is suspected as tumorous condition except a mild edema.
Postoperative cervical MRI (after 3 months from surgery) shows improvement of cord swelling and remaining focal high signal foci on T2 weighted image. A : T1 weighted image. B : T2 weighted image. C : T1 weighted enhanced image.