Immune-mediated Disorders of the Spinal Cord: Diagnosis, Treatment Strategies, and Outcomes in the 21st Century

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Cover image for research topic "Immune-mediated Disorders of the Spinal Cord: Diagnosis, Treatment Strategies, and Outcomes in the 21st Century"
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Schematic representation of myelitis lesion location and gadolinium enhancement patterns on spinal cord MRI in AQP4-IgG-positive neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder (AQP4+NMOSD), MOG-IgG associated-disease (MOGAD), and multiple sclerosis (MS). Sagittal T2 (A) and T1 post-gadolinium (B) MRI images (left half); and axial T2 (C1,D1,E1) and T1 post-gadolinium (C2,D2,E2) images (right half) are schematically represented. Patients with AQP4+NMOSD myelitis typically show a single longitudinally extensive lesion in the cervical spinal cord [(A) upper part] with extensive parenchymal involvement axially (C1) on T2 weighted sequences. These lesions typically show gadolinium enhancement during attacks, often at the periphery of the T2 lesion with a ring-like pattern axially (C2) or “elongated ring” when appreciated on sagittal images [(B) upper part]. In MOGAD, myelitis lesions can affect any spinal cord level with similar frequency. Short and longer T2-lesions can coexist (not shown) [(A) central part]; while acute lesion enhancement is absent in ~50% of cases [(B) central part, (D2)] and when present is often nonspecific. On axial images, T2 abnormalities often predominantly involve the central gray matter (H-sign) (D1). Lastly, MS myelitis lesions are typically short on sagittal T2 images [(A) bottom part], often showing ring or nodular/ovoid enhancement during acute attacks [(B) bottom part, (E2)]. On axial images, T2 lesions typically affect the periphery of the spinal cord along the dorsal or lateral columns that clinically results in a “partial transverse myelitis” (E1). All three diseases can involve the entire spinal cord, and different lesion locations in this figure are intended for graphic purposes.
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Examples of inflammatory myelopathies on MRI. The extension of the T2-hyperintensities along consecutive vertebral segments is highlighted by asterisks. [(A) MS] Acute short cervical lesion with focal spinal cord swelling [(A1) arrow] involving the central gray matter and the dorsal columns [(A2) arrow], showing homogeneous enhancement on sagittal view [(A4) arrow] and a circular ring of enhancement on axial view [(A5) arrow]. A chronic lesion at the level of C4 is also observed [(A1) arrowhead], located in the dorsal columns [(A3) arrowhead] and not showing contrast enhancement (A6). [(B) AQP4+NMOSD] Thoracic spinal cord lesion, longitudinally extensive on T2-weighted images [(B1) arrow], centrally located [(B2) arrow], showing lens-shaped ring enhancement on sagittal view [(B3) arrow], and inhomogeneous enhancement on axial view [(B4) arrow]. [(C) MOGAD] Cervico-thoracic spinal cord lesion, longitudinally extensive on T2-weighted images characterized by a “sagittal linear” aspect [(C1) arrow] corresponding to a selective involvement of the gray matter (“H-sign”), on axial view [(C2) arrow]. Parenchymal enhancement is absent (C3,C4), although a subtle leptomeningeal enhancement is detected [(C3) arrowheads]. [(D) Sarcoidosis] Cervical spinal cord lesion, longitudinally extensive on T2-weighted images [(D1) arrow] involving the central gray matter and the dorsal columns [(D2) arrow], with dorsal enhancement on sagittal view [(D3) arrow] and “trident sign” on axial view [(D5) arrow]. Increased glucose uptake is also observed, corresponding to an area of red color in the positron-emission tomography (D4). [(E) Paraneoplastic] Cervical spinal cord lesion, longitudinally extensive on T2-weighted images [(E1) arrow] involving the lateral white matter tracts bilaterally [(E2) arrows], showing subtle enhancement on sagittal view [(E3) arrow] and axial view [(E4) arrows]. FDG-PET, 18F-Fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography; Gd, gadolinium; T2-w, T2-weighted; T1-w, T1-weighted.
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