Spinal cord involvement has been observed rarely in primary central nervous system vasculitis (PCNSV), and histopathologically proven isolated cord angiitis usually involves the thoracic level or terminal conus1,2. We report a very rare case of isolated cervical cord involvement in PCNSV. The diagnosis was first made by spinal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to survey the possible etiologies of cervical myelopathy, and finally confirmed by histopathological analysis.
A 57-year-old Han Chinese male was transferred to the Internal Medicine Department of National Cheng Kung University Hospital in Taiwan in September 2012 with an 8-month history of quadriparesis. He had a diagnosis of cervical myelopathy because of progressive 4-limb weakness and paresthesia, as well as neurogenic bladder. Autoantibody profiles were negative. Spinal MRI showed focal intramedullary enhancing lesions at C3–6 levels with cord edematous change (Figure 1A), leading to a possible cause of myelitis, demyelination, or tumor. Further, brain MRI examination showed no abnormality. Nevertheless, histopathological analysis revealed perivascular granulomatous lesion and lymphocyte infiltration composed of clustered epithelioid histiocytes and aggregated lymphocytes, consistent with granulomatous angiitis (Figure 1B). There were no vascular thrombosis, stained pathogens, and demyelinating lesions in the cord sections. Indeed, PCNSV imaging may show enhancing lesions, such as in our case3. High-dose corticosteroids (1 mg/kg/day prednisolone) and monthly pulse cyclophosphamide (CYC) therapy (0.75 g/m2 for 6 mos) were prescribed under the diagnosis of PCNSV4, followed by maintenance usage of oral CYC (1 mg/kg/day). Despite the reported recovery of neurological deficit by the corticosteroid/immunosuppressant therapy5, our patient had stationary quadriparesis without other organ involvement during a 5-year followup period.
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