Sunday, March 11, 2012


The frontal chest radiograph showed bilateral hilar prominence (Figure 1). CT of the chest demonstrated scattered bilateral ground glass opacities (Figure 2). High-intensity T2 signals from the MRI brain showed a few nonspecific white matter lesions in the left frontal and parietal lobes. There was no abnormal parenchymal or leptomeningeal enhancement (Figure 3). Increased T2 signal from the cervical/thoracic spine indicated prominent elongated intramedullary sarcoidosis from C2 through T3-T4, underlying central canal stenosis at C5-C6 and C6-C7 and mild leptomeningeal/intramedullary enhancement at C5-C6 (Figures 4 through 6).


DIAGNOSIS

Intramedullary spinal sarcoidosis myelopathy.

DISCUSSION

Sarcoidosis is an idiopathic disease associated with noncaseating granuloma formation. It can affect multiple organs throughout the body, most notably the lungs and lymph nodes. It usually presents in patients between the ages of 20 and 40 years. African Americans are affected more often, women more often than men. Fifty percent of patients can be asymptomatic at diagnosis, 25% develop cough/dyspnea. Clinical central nervous system (CNS) involvement occurs in approximately 5% of patients; however, it is found 25% of the time at autopsy. Intramedullary sarcoidosis is rare and occurs in less than 1% of cases.
The clinical presentation of neurosarcoidosis is nonspecific but is usually related to granulomatous involvement of the basal meninges that subsequently affects the cranial nerves. Leptomeningeal involvement occurs in approximately 40% of cases, characterized by abnormal thickening and enhancement. Nonspecific high-signal T2 periventricular white matter lesions are the most frequent intraparenchymal MRI finding.
Intraspinal sarcoid was classified by Junger et al into four stages. In phase 1, the spinal cord is normal in size and demonstrates linear leptomeningeal enhancement. In phase 2, presumed spread of leptomeningeal inflammation through Virchow-Robin spaces results in diffuse spinal cord enlargement with early faint enhancement. With phase 3, there is a decrease in cord swelling and presence of focal/multifocal enhancement. Finally, in phase 4, there is no more enhancement and the cord can become normal size or atrophic.
The differential diagnosis for intramedullary neurosarcoidosis can be quite long and includes demylinating disease, tumor, infection, infarct, and vasculitis. In this case, even though there is no direct CNS histology, the abnormal chest imaging, elevated serum ACE, and positive lymph node histology classify the findings as probable neurosarcoidosis.
Myelopathy from intramedullary neurosarcoidsosis can be the initial clinical presentation of this disease. It is important to keep this in mind in the appropriate clinical setting.


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