Transverse myelitis

Last revised by Henry Knipe on 12 Jun 2023

Transverse myelitis, also known as acute transverse myelitis, is an inflammatory condition affecting both halves of the spinal cord and associated with rapidly progressive motor, sensory, and autonomic dysfunction.

MRI is the most useful imaging modality, which generally shows a long segment (3-4 segments or more) of T2 increased signal occupying greater than two-thirds of the cross-sectional area of the cord, with variable pattern of enhancement and no diffusion restriction.

The incidence of acute transverse myelitis is 1-4 new cases per million people per year 7. It affects individuals of all ages with peaks at ages 10-19 years and 30-39 years 7. There is no sex or familial predisposition and usually no prior history of neurologic abnormality.

The clinical course is highly variable but typically evolves over hours or days.

Symptoms and signs are bilateral and include:

  • para- or tetraparesis

  • sensory impairment level

  • sphincter dysfunction

As the diagnosis does not have a sensitive and specific laboratory test, histology is usually not obtained, particularly as biopsy of the spinal cord has a high morbidity. Imaging features overlap with other inflammatory and neoplastic entities. A set of diagnostic criteria have been proposed by the Transverse Myelitis Consortium Working Group 7:

  • inclusion criteria

    • development of sensory, motor, or autonomic dysfunction attributable to the spinal cord

    • bilateral signs and symptoms (though not necessarily symmetric)

    • clearly defined sensory level

    • exclusion of extra-axial compressive cause by neuroimaging (MRI or myelography; CT is not adequate)

    • inflammation within the spinal cord demonstrated by CSF pleocytosis or increased IgG index or gadolinium enhancement

    • progression to nadir between 4 hours and 21 days after the onset of symptoms

  • exclusion criteria

    • radiation to the spine within the last 10 years

    • arterial distribution clinical deficit consistent with thrombosis of the anterior spinal artery

    • abnormal flow voids on the surface of the spinal cord consistent with AVF

  • exclusion criteria for idiopathic acute transverse myelitis

Pathology may reveal perivascular lymphocytic infiltrates, necrosis, and demyelination. In many cases, no underlying cause is identified. In some patients, however, an etiology is identified:

  • acute infection (most commonly viral)

  • post-infection (ADEM)

  • post-vaccination

  • autoimmune (SLE, MS)

  • systemic malignancy

  • atopy and allergy (atopic myelitis9

Lesions may occur anywhere within the cord, with the thoracic cord being the most frequently involved site.

  • variable enlargement of the spinal cord

  • variable contrast enhancement patterns (including no enhancement)

Up to 40% of cases have no findings on MRI 8. In the remainder, the appearance is variable and non-specific:

  • there is a large variation in lesion size, however, they most commonly extend for 3-4 spinal segments 3

  • lesions typically occupy greater than two-thirds of the cross-sectional area of the cord 3

  • there is variable enlargement of the spinal cord

Typical signal characteristics include:

  • T1: isointense or hypointense

  • T2: poorly delineated hyperintense signal

  • T1 C+ (Gd): variable enhancement patterns (none, diffuse, patchy, peripheral)

Treatment of secondary acute transverse myelitis depends on the underlying cause. No treatment currently exists for idiopathic cases.

One-third of patients recover with little or no sequelae, one-third are left with a moderate degree of permanent disability, and one-third are left with severe disabilities 3.

General imaging differential considerations include:

  • longitudinally extensive spinal cord lesion: typical of neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder (including systemic lupus erythematosus)

  • multiple sclerosis

    • plaques are shorter than two vertebral body segments in length and involve less than half the cross-sectional area of the cord

    • plaques are characteristically peripherally located in the dorsal and lateral columns

    • in most patients, additional lesions of variable enhancement are present in the brain and spinal cord (MS is solely confined to the spinal cord in ~15% (range 5-24%) of patients ref)

    • acute transverse myelitis can be the presenting feature of MS: 83% of patients with transverse myelitis who also have lesions on MRI brain will ultimately be diagnosed with MS; if MRI brain is normal, there is an ~12.5% (range 11-13%) chance of ultimately being diagnosed with MS 7,10

  • ADEM: similar appearance to spinal MS plaques (however younger age at presentation, monophasic clinical course and more often associated with thalamic lesions)

  • spinal cord infarct

    • spinal cord is usually enlarged

    • hyperintense on T2 weighted images and DWI

    • post-contrast enhancement may or may not be present (enhancement is usually present in the subacute stage)

    • signal intensity abnormality may be limited to the central grey matter or may involve most of the cross-sectional area of the cord

    • signal abnormality typically extends over multiple vertebral body segments

    • can occur at any location in the cord but has a propensity for the upper thoracic or thoracolumbar regions

    • vertebral body T2 hyperintensity may occasionally be seen (due to concomitant infarction)

  • intramedullary neoplasm

    • invariable spinal cord expansion

    • the majority show at least some contrast enhancement

    • commonly associated with cysts and syringohydromyelia

    • may have evidence of prior hemorrhage

    • slowly progressive clinical course

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