Case Report: Acute Spinal Cord Myelopathy in Patients With COVID-19

Front Neurol. 2020 Dec 22:11:610648. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2020.610648. eCollection 2020.

Abstract

COVID-19 is typically associated with fever and severe respiratory symptoms including dry cough and dyspnea. However, COVID-19 may also affect both central and peripheral nervous systems. To date, the incidence rate of spinal cord involvement in COVID-19 is not known and the pathogenesis is still not fully understood. We report here two female patients admitted to Assiut University Hospitals/Egypt during the period from first of July to August 10, 2020. Both presented with a positive SARS-CoV-2 polymerase chain reaction (PCR) nasopharyngeal swab, elevated serum d-dimer and ferritin levels, and bilateral ground glass appearance in a CT chest scan. The first was a 60-year-old female with acute onset of flaccid paraplegia 10 days after flu-like symptoms, in whom MRI revealed transverse myelitis. The second was a 21-year-old female with symptoms of acute quadriplegia, fever, headache, and anosmia in whom an MRI scan revealed long cervico-thoracic myelopathy. Anterior spinal artery occlusion and possibly transverse myelitis were considered as differential diagnosis of long segment myelopathy.

Keywords: COVID-19; SARC V2; anterior spinal artery infarct; anterior spinal artery occlusion; case report; magnetic resonance image (MRI); spinal cord myelopathy; transverse myelitis.

Publication types

  • Case Reports