Acute flaccid paralysis
From IDWiki
Background
Epidemiology
- In Canada, 27 to 51 cases nationally every year
- Enterovirus D68 May have a biennial pattern with peaks every 2 years
Clinical Presentation
- Defined as sudden onset of muscle weakness or paralysis
- Flaccid or hypotonic, rather than hypertonic
- No other obvious cause, such as trauma
- Excludes transient weakness
- In acute flaccid myelitis, there are changes seen on MRI of the spinal cord
Differential Diagnosis
- About half of cases in Canada are eventually diagnosed with Guillain-Barré syndrome and 20% with transverse myelitis
Guillain-Barré Syndrome and Paralytic Poliomyelitis
Guillain-Barré syndrome | Paralytic poliomyelitis | |
---|---|---|
Fever | afebrile | febrile with myalgias |
Progression | subacute, days to weeks | acute, peaks at 2-4 days |
Neurological deficits | ascending, symmetric muscle weakness with decreased DTRs | asymmetric weakness with increased DTRs; proximal more than distal, and legs more than arms |
Sensory changes | mild disturbances or paresthesias | none |
CSF findings | minimal or no pleocytosis, but elevated protein (albuminocytologic dissociation) | pleocytosis with elevated protein, normal glucose (aseptic meningitis) |
Exhaustive List
- Infection
- Viral
- Picornaviridae
- Flaviviridae: West Nile virus, Japanese encephalitis, tick-borne encephalitis
- Herpesviridae: CMV, EBV, VZV
- HIV-related opportunistic infections
- Rabies
- Bacteria
- Viral
- Neuropathy
- Guillain-Barré syndrome, though it is typically symmetrical and bilateral ascending paralysis that may include loss of sensation
- Acute motor axonal neuropathy
- Critical illness neuropathy
- Lead poisoning
- Other heavy metal poisoning
- Spinal cord
- Acute transverse myelitis
- Acute spinal cord compression
- Trauma
- Infection
- Neuromuscular junction
- Muscle
- Functional
Investigations
- CBC
- Imaging: CT head, MRI brain
- CSF for routine, and especially for virology
- Viral (especially enteroviral) PCR from CSF, nasopharyngeal swab, and/or stool
- Stool sample is sent in unpreserved, simple sterile container
- If Enterovirus PCR is positive, can request specific PCR or sequencing for poliovirus, EV D68, and EV A71
Management
- All cases of acute flaccid paralysis are reportable in Ontario