Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM) and multiple sclerosis (MS) are both inflammatory demyelinating diseases of the central nervous system (CNS).
Gadolinium-DTPA enhanced MRI may therefore prove useful in distinguishing monophasic and multiphasic disease, but a study of enhancement in ADEM has yet to be performed.
certain patterns of MRI abnormality in ADEM which would be unusual in MS.
SYMMETRY :In particular, there was a pattern in some cases of extensive and relatively symmetric abnormalities in the cerebral and cerebellar white matter, and in one case in the basal ganglia, a rare finding in MS
.Serial MRI offers help in differentiating monophasic from multiphasic disease.
- Whereas ADEM is usually a monophasic illness, MS is by definition a multiphasic disease which frequently results in stepwise or steadily progressive deterioration in neurological function. For this reason differentiation of ADEM from MS in a patient with a single clinical episode attributable to CNS demyelination is of prognostic importance.
- Certain clinical features may help to differentiate the two conditions. ADEM often produces a widespread CNS disturbance with coma or drowsiness, seizures, and multifocal neurological signs implicating the brain, spinal cord and optic nerves. In contrast, MS usually presents as a monosymptomatic syndrome such as optic neuritis or a subacute myelopathy.
- ADEM may also present in this way although with some differences. Thus optic neuritis in ADEM is usually simultaneously bilateral whereas in MS it is more often unilateral; myelopathy in MS is frequently partial but in ADEM it is often complete and associated with areflexia. Nevertheless no clinical feature is exclusive to one or other disorder.
- In MS, lesions would be of a varying age; in mostpatients with ADEM, they would all be the same age. Studies in MS using gadolinium- DTPA enhanced MRI show a mixture of enhancing and nonenhancing lesions and there is evidence that enhancement (which indicates an abnormal blood-brain barrier) is a consistent feature of new and active lesions
- Given that ADEM is usually a monophasic disease, it might be expected that all lesions would enhance in the acute phase, while none would do so in the chronic phase.
Gadolinium-DTPA enhanced MRI may therefore prove useful in distinguishing monophasic and multiphasic disease, but a study of enhancement in ADEM has yet to be performed.
certain patterns of MRI abnormality in ADEM which would be unusual in MS.
SYMMETRY :In particular, there was a pattern in some cases of extensive and relatively symmetric abnormalities in the cerebral and cerebellar white matter, and in one case in the basal ganglia, a rare finding in MS
.Serial MRI offers help in differentiating monophasic from multiphasic disease.
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