We present the case of a 56-year-old woman who visited the emergency department due to an epigastric sensation of electricity irradiating around the waist. Symptoms had progressed for 2 weeks with hiccups, paraesthesia from the feet to the nipples, dyspnoea, and impaired gait. Physical examination revealed marked paraparesis with pyramidal signs in the lower limbs, absence of abdominal reflex, and hypoaesthesia below the T4 sensory level. CSF analysis revealed aseptic meningitis. MRI revealed longitudinally extensive transverse myelitis, extending from the medullopontine junction to the eleventh thoracic vertebra; involvement was predominantly central, and the area postrema displayed gadolinium uptake (Figs. 1 and 2). The patient was administered 5 high-dose methylprednisolone pulses; from the third day, treatment was started with plasmapheresis, with the patient becoming clinically stable after 7 sessions. She required non-invasive mechanical stimulation with continuous positive airway pressure overnight, and lost urinary and anal sphincter control. Determination of anti–aquaporin-4 antibodies yielded positive results. Subsequently, she presented loss of visual acuity in the right eye, pain with extraocular movement, and optic disc oedema. Methylprednisolone pulse therapy was administered to preserve visual acuity; an MRI study revealed contrast uptake in the right optic nerve. Having ruled out other causes, we established a diagnosis of neuromyelitis optica, displaying all 3 cardinal symptoms (area postrema syndrome, acute myelitis, and optic neuritis) and positive antibody findings1,2. Rituximab was prescribed to prevent further attacks.
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Consent for publicationThe patient gave written informed consent for the publication of her clinical case.
Ethical statementThe article meets the ethical standards of the journal Neurology Perspectives. A formal ethics statement was submitted to the journal Neurology Perspectives.