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Central nervous system, spinal root ganglion and brachial plexus involvement in leprosy: A prospective study

Sumit Verma, Ravindra Kumar Garg, Imran Rizvi, Hardeep Singh Malhotra, Neeraj Kumar, Amita Jain, Swastika Suvirya, Anit Parihar, Rajesh Verma, Praveen Sharma, Shweta Pandey, Ravi Uniyal, Shantanu Prakash

2022Journal of Central Nervous System Disease13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background Leprosy is primarily a disease of peripheral nerves. Some isolated case reports and case series have communicated imaging changes in the central nervous system (CNS) and brachial plexus in patients with leprosy. Objectives To study the neuroimaging abnormalities in patients with lepra bacilli-positive neuropathy in the context of CNS, spinal root ganglion, and brachial plexus. Design Prospective observational study Methods We screened newly-diagnosed patients with multibacillary leprosy presenting with neuropathy. Patients with bacilli-positive sural nerve biopsies were included in the study and subjected to magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain and spinal cord. Results A total of 54 patients with bacteriologically confirmed multibacillary leprosy were screened; Mycobacterium leprae was demonstrated in the sural nerve biopsies of 29 patients. Five patients (5/29; 17.24%) had MRI abnormalities in CNS, spinal root ganglion, and/or brachial plexus. Three patients had MRI changes suggestive of either myelitis or ganglionitis. One patient had T2/FLAIR hyperintensity in the middle cerebellar peduncle while 1 had T2/FLAIR hyperintensity in the brachial plexus. Conclusion CNS, spinal root ganglion, and brachial plexus are involved in patients with leprous neuropathy. Immunological reaction against M leprae antigen might be a plausible pathogenetic mechanism for brachial plexus and CNS imaging abnormalities.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineBrachial plexusGanglionFluid-attenuated inversion recoveryHyperintensityContext (archaeology)PathologySural nerveMycobacterium lepraeNerve rootLeprosyCentral nervous systemMagnetic resonance imagingAnatomyRadiologyInternal medicinePaleontologyBiologyLeprosy Research and TreatmentInfectious Diseases and TuberculosisPeripheral Neuropathies and Disorders
Central nervous system, spinal root ganglion and brachial plexus involvement in leprosy: A prospective study | Litcius