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Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis
10
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1998
Year
Emergency PhysiciansNeurological DisorderMedicinePathogenesisPediatricsDiagnosisEncephalitic SignsNeuroimagingNeurologyBrain LesionEncephalitisMultiple SclerosisNeuropathologyNeuroimmunologyMagnetic Resonance Imaging
Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis is a rare central nervous system demyelinating disease that occurs most frequently in children. It usually runs a monophasic course, beginning with fever, headache, and meningeal signs and rapidly progressing to coma when appropriate diagnosis and treatment are not provided. We report a case of a 14-year-old patient to alert emergency physicians to consider acute disseminated encephalomyelitis when presented with any child with encephalitic signs with nonspecific cerebrospinal fluid findings, failure to detect any causative agent, and only mild alterations on computerized tomography scan. The role of magnetic resonance imaging for the diagnosis is emphasized.