Artigo Revisado por pares

Paraparesia espástica tropical/mielopatía asociada al HTLV-I en la infancia. Caso clínico y revisión bibliográfica

2004; Viguera Publishers; Volume: 39; Issue: 12 Linguagem: Inglês

10.33588/rn.3912.2003611

ISSN

1576-6578

Autores

Sofia Quintas, Teresa Moreno, Nuno Lobo Antunes, António Levy Gomes,

Tópico(s)

T-cell and Retrovirus Studies

Resumo

HTLV-I associated myelopathy is characterised by a clinical picture of slowly progressive spastic paraparesis that generally presents when the patient is at an age somewhere between his or her thirties and sixties; few cases have been reported involving children. It is a pathology that is prevalent in tropical regions that are endemic for HTLV-I (southern Japan, the Caribbean, Central and South America, and some areas of Africa).The authors report the case of a 9-year-old child from Guinea who was admitted to the Paediatric Neurology Unit in the Hospital de Santa Maria with a two-year-old clinical history of spastic paraparesis. Computerised tomography and magnetic resonance imaging did not show any alterations to the spinal cord. Somatosensory evoked potentials revealed a lesion in the posterior dorsolumbar spinal cord. The exclusion of other (infectious, metabolic and demyelinating) pathologies and the confirmation of infection by HTLV-I (by means of PCR) led to a diagnosis of myelopathy associated to this virus. Therapy was established with interferon alfa, but no appreciable significant improvement was observed.This case stands out because of the uncommonness of this pathology at the paediatric age. We review the most relevant aspects of this disorder at the earliest ages, above all with regard to its epidemiology, transmission, clinical symptoms and complementary diagnostic examinations. Known therapeutic options (corticoids, interferon alfa, antiretroviral agents, among others) and prognosis are also discussed.

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