1. Three-Year Longitudinal Motor Function and Disability Level of Acute Flaccid Myelitis
- Author
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Mari Asaoka, Tetsuhiro Fukuyama, Naohisa Kawamura, Tamami Yano, Takayoshi Kawabata, Kotaro Nakano, Eriko Kikuchi, Tomoyuki Miyamoto, Mika Inoue, Akihisa Okumura, Masato Hiyane, Etsushi Toyofuku, Yuichi Takami, Yusaku Endo, Keiko Tanaka-Taya, Nobuyoshi Sugiyama, Yu Tsuyusaki, Sawa Yasumoto, Keiko Suzuki, Nobuko Moriyama, Takako Fujita, Yasuhiro Suzuki, Eri Takeshita, Hitoshi Mikami, Yuichi Abe, Ryutaro Kira, Chiharu Miyatake, Hiroyuki Torisu, Akira Kumakura, Akane Kanazawa, Tatsuharu Sato, Yuya Takahashi, Hiroshi Terashima, Sonoko Kubota, Genrei Ohta, Mariko Kasai, Yu Ishida, Pin Fee Chong, Noboru Yoshida, Shinichiro Goto, Taira Toki, Ayako Hattori, Wakako Ishii, Kenichi Tanaka, Miho Yamamuro, Sahoko Ono, Yukihiko Konishi, Harushi Mori, Nozomi Koran, Kazuhide Ohta, Kenichi Sakajiri, Michiaki Nagura, and Kyoko Ban
- Subjects
Male ,Weakness ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Activities of daily living ,Severity of Illness Index ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Developmental Neuroscience ,030225 pediatrics ,Activities of Daily Living ,Enterovirus Infections ,medicine ,Paralysis ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Mobility Limitation ,Child ,Tetraplegia ,Enterovirus D, Human ,Hand Strength ,business.industry ,Monoplegia ,Triplegia ,Neuromuscular Diseases ,Myelitis ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Acute flaccid myelitis ,Neurology ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Central Nervous System Viral Diseases ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Paraplegia ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
We summarize the long-term motor outcome and disability level in a cluster of pediatric patients with acute flaccid myelitis (AFM) associated with the enterovirus D68 outbreak in 2015.This is a nationwide follow-up questionnaire analysis study. Clinical data including the motor function (manual muscle strength test) and other neurological symptoms were collected at the acute (nadir), recovery (six months), and chronic (three years) stages. We use the Barthel index, which measures 10 variables describing activity of daily living and mobility to assess the disability level.Clinical data of 33 patients with AFM (13 females, 20 males; median age = 4.1 years) were available. Among patients with tetraplegia or triplegia, paraplegia, and monoplegia at the acute stage, two of seven, four of thirteen, and two of thirteen exhibited complete recovery without paralysis; of those five of seven, eight of thirteen, and two of thirteen showed improvement with lesser limb involvement at the chronic stage, respectively. Nine patients (27%) demonstrated improvement at the recovery-to-chronic period. All six patients with positive isolation of enterovirus D68 from biological samples at the acute stage showed persistent motor deficits. Other neurological findings had better prognosis than motor weakness. Better Barthel index score at the chronic stage was observed (P 0.001; median difference [95% confidence interval], 53 [40 to 63]), implying an improved disability level even in patients with persistent motor deficits.AFM has a high rate of persistent motor deficits showing one- to two-limb paralysis. Disability level of patients with AFM, however, generally improved at the three-year time point.
- Published
- 2021
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