Case Reports

Worsening nausea, vomiting, and dizziness • 20-pound weight loss in 2 months • mild hearing loss • reoccurring episodes of falls • Dx?

Author and Disclosure Information

 

References

Our patient. After her diagnosis of NMOSD/MOG-antibody disease, our patient’s symptoms progressed to include vertigo, vestibular ataxia, pruritus, left foot drop, lower extremity numbness, and decreased hearing. After the second rituximab infusion her symptoms continued, but over time stabilized and have not worsened. She currently receives gabapentin 300 mg every 8 hours, as needed, for extremity numbness (which has been working well) along with sertraline 100 mg/d for depression.

Risk factors for NMOSD include female gender, Asian and African ethnicities, Epstein-Barr virus seropositivity, and tobacco abuse.

Subsequent office visits have showed no further weight loss. Based on the current response to the rituximab, her prognosis is undetermined by Neurology as they continue to monitor for progression.

THE TAKEAWAY

Vestibular ataxia, foot drop, pruritus, vertigo, decreased hearing, numbness, and oculomotor dysfunction in the presence of nausea and vomiting should raise suspicion for NMOSD. The presence of AQP4 antibodies along with demyelinating central nervous system lesions, is highly indicative of NMO. The presence of MOG antibodies may indicate NMOSD/MOG-antibody disease. The initial treatment of NMOSD is intravenous methylprednisolone, which can be followed by treatment with rituximab to achieve remission.

CORRESPONDENCE
Daniel Murphy, MD, FAAFP, Department of Family and Community Medicine, Texas Tech University Health Science Center El Paso, 9849 Kenworthy Street, El Paso, Texas 79924; Daniel.murphy@ttuhsc.edu

Pages

Recommended Reading

Biogen plans to submit application to FDA for Alzheimer’s drug aducanumab
MDedge Family Medicine
ACIP approves 2020 adult vaccination schedule
MDedge Family Medicine
FDA approves onabotulinumtoxinA for pediatric lower limb spasticity
MDedge Family Medicine
CBD: What physicians need to know about it
MDedge Family Medicine
Dr. Paul Aisen Q&A: Aducanumab for Alzheimer’s
MDedge Family Medicine
Celiac disease may underlie seizures
MDedge Family Medicine
Blood test might rival PET scan for detecting brain amyloidosis
MDedge Family Medicine
FDA approves diroximel fumarate for relapsing MS
MDedge Family Medicine
Brain abscess with lung infection? Think Nocardia
MDedge Family Medicine
Insomnia symptoms increase likelihood of stroke and heart disease
MDedge Family Medicine