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Linear Pontine Trigeminal Root Lesions in Multiple Sclerosis
Clinical and Magnetic Resonance Imaging Studies in 5 Cases
Ichiro Nakashima, MD;
Kazuo Fujihara, MD;
Teiko Kimpara, MD;
Naoshi Okita, MD;
Sadao Takase, MD;
Yasuto Itoyama, MD
Arch Neurol. 2001;58:101-104.
Background Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is useful for demonstrating demyelinating
lesions in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS). Magnetic resonance imaging
studies show that MS lesions are generally not uniform in shape, size, or
distribution. Linearly shaped lesions at the trigeminal root entry zone have
been occasionally reported in single cases of MS, but, to our knowlege, the
frequency and the clinical features of such patients have not been comprehensively
characterized.
Objective To describe the frequency and the clinical and laboratory features of
patients with MS who had linearly shaped lesions at the trigeminal root as
seen on MRI.
Design and Setting A retrospective review of medical records and MRI films of Japanese
patients with MS admitted to a university hospital and its affiliated hospital
in Sendai, Japan.
Patients and Methods Brain MRI films of 74 consecutive Japanese patients with MS (51 females
and 23 males) were studied retrospectively and the clinical and laboratory
features of the patients with linearly shaped lesions at the trigeminal root
were also investigated retrospectively.
Results Five patients (6.8%) were shown to have T1-weightedhypointense,
T2-weightedhyperintense, nonenhanced linear lesions in the pons on
MRI, and these were uniformly localized in the intramedullary portion of the
trigeminal root. All of these patients had clinically definite MS and had
various types of facial sensory disturbances, such as neuralgia (1 patient),
hypesthesia (2 patients), or paresthesia (3 patients). No other clinical or
laboratory feature was characteristic in these 5 patients.
Conclusions Linear pontine trigeminal root lesions were common in our patients with
MS. They were associated with various facial sensory symptoms. Since similar
lesions are formed in animal models of herpes simplex virus infection, further
study is needed to clarify whether these MS lesions are virally induced.
From the Departments of Neurology, Tohoku University School of Medicine
(Drs Nakashima, Fujihara, Kimpara, and Itoyama) and Kohnan Hospital (Drs Okita
and Takase), Sendai, Japan.
Corresponding author and reprints: Ichiro Nakashima, MD, Department
of Neurology, Tohoku University School of Medicine, 1-1 Seiryo-machi, Aoba-ku,
Sendai 980-8574, Japan, (e-mail: inakashima{at}neurol.med.tohoku.ac.jp).
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