Neuromyelitis Optica in the Old Age: a Clinico-pathological Contribution
Overview
Affiliations
We present a case of neuromyelitis optica (NMO) in a previously healthy 64-year-old woman. While CT scan and MRI investigations of the brain as well as myelography were normal, CSF revealed a pathological increase of IgG. Notwithstanding an intensive steroid therapy the patient died after 4 1/2 months. Microscopic examination showed, besides extensive demyelination of the optic nerves and spinal cord (especially in its cervico-dorsal tract), several small demyelinating plaques in the white matter of the pons and near the right lateral ventricle. These findings confirm once again that NMO is a clinical variant of multiple sclerosis and that this disease may make it first appearance at an old age.
Very late-onset neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder beyond the age of 75.
Krumbholz M, Hofstadt-van Oy U, Angstwurm K, Kleiter I, Jarius S, Paul F J Neurol. 2015; 262(5):1379-84.
PMID: 25957640 PMC: 4441737. DOI: 10.1007/s00415-015-7766-8.