BMJ Neurology Open (Apr 2024)

‘Grasshopper sign’: the novel imaging of post-COVID-19 myelopathy with delayed longitudinal white matter abnormalities

  • Yuji Takahashi,
  • Noriko Sato,
  • Wakiro Sato,
  • Reiko Saika,
  • Motohiro Okumura,
  • Kazumasa Sekiguchi,
  • Tomoko Okamoto,
  • Hiroyuki Maki,
  • Takashi Yamamura

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjno-2024-000730
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1

Abstract

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Introduction Recently, there have been a few reports of atypical post-coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) myelopathy manifesting tract-specific lesions similar to those due to vitamin B12 deficiency. However, the precise characteristics of imaging or clinical course remain not well understood.Methods A retrospective analysis of the clinical and imaging characteristics of four patients who were referred to our hospital with a unique post-COVID-19 myelopathy was performed.Results Four-to-six weeks following COVID-19 infection in the summer of 2023, four middle-aged men developed paraparesis, hypo/dysesthesia and bladder/bowel disturbance, suggesting myelopathy. Although spinal MRI showed no abnormalities in the early stages, tract-specific longitudinal lesions along the dorsal and lateral columns became apparent as the symptoms progressed. Owing to the lack of MRI findings at the early stage, all cases were challenging to diagnose. However, the patients remained partially responsive to aggressive immunosuppressive therapies, even in the advanced stage.Discussion We termed these tract-specific longitudinal lesions in the presented case series ‘Grasshopper sign’ because brain coronal and spine axial MRI findings looked like a grasshopper’s antennae and face. Early identification of the characteristic MRI abnormality could allow for early intervention using intensive immunosuppressive therapy, which could improve patient outcomes.