Respiratory complications occur in advanced multiple sclerosis (MS) but may also complicate acute relapses earlier in the disease. We present 19 patients with MS who developed respiratory complications at a mean of 5.9 (range 1-12) yrs after the onset of neurological symptoms. Fourteen patients developed severe respiratory insufficiency presenting with a combination of reduced forced vital capacity (FVC), hypoxaemia or hypercapnia (12 patients) and respiratory arrest (four patients). Two patients presented with apneustic breathing, one with paroxysmal hyperventilation, one with obstructive sleep apnoea and one with bulbar weakness leading to aspiration pneumonia. Respiratory muscle weakness was a major factor in 14 patients (predominantly diaphragm involvement in six), bulbar weakness in seven patients, impaired voluntary control in three and impaired automatic control in three. Twelve patients received mechanical respiratory support of whom seven have subsequently died. The methods of support used were intermittent positive pressure ventilation (nine patients), iron lung (three), cuirass (two) and rocking bed (one). Six patients were maintained on respiratory support until they died after intervals varying from 24 h to 6 yrs (mean 17.7 mths). Five patients received temporary ventilation for between 6 d and 42 d: of these four remain alive at up to 4 yrs and one died after 16 yrs. One patient remains on domiciliary nasal intermittent positive pressure ventilation (IPPV) after 1 yr.
Many patients with previous poliomyelitis develop 'post-polio syndrome' (PPS) in which late functional deterioration follows a period of relative stability. The frequency with which PPS can be attributed to clearly defined causes remains uncertain. We reviewed 283 newly-referred patients with previous poliomyelitis seen consecutively over a 4-year period; 239 patients developed symptoms of functional deterioration at a mean of 35 (5-65) years after the paralytic illness. Functional deterioration was associated with orthopaedic disorders in 170 cases, neurological disorders in 35, respiratory disorders in 19 and other disorders in 15. Progressive post-polio muscular atrophy was not observed. Functional deterioration following paralytic polio-myelitis is common, and associated with orthopaedic, neurological, respiratory and general medical factors which are potentially treatable.
It has been suggested that late onset neurological deterioration after poliomyelitis may be due in some cases to persistent poliovirus infection of the central nervous system. In view of this, we decide to determine whether polioviruses and other enteroviruses can persist in the central nervous system. In a previous study, one of us (M.K.S.) reported serological evidence of persistent poliovirus infection of the central nervous system (CNS) in a proportion of these patients. We have now studied cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) from these patients for the presence of enterovirus RNA sequences using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Enteroviral RNA was detected in 3 of 24 patients with a clinical diagnosis of post-polio syndrome, but in none of 36 patients with stable poliomyelitis, and none of 36 patients with other neurological conditions of noninfective origin. All 3 patients in whom viral RNA was detected had high intrathecal levels of poliovirus-specific oligoclonal IgM bands. In a second study we examined formalin-fixed postmortem CNS tissue from 7 patients with a history of paralytic poliomyelitis. Enterovirus RNA was detected in tissue from the spinal cord from 3 patients, but not in the cerebral cortex. We are now conducting a larger prospective, blind study of patients with evidence of late deterioration. Analysis of the first 30 patients studied revealed the presence of enterovirus RNA in CSF of 1 of 4 patients with unexplained late-onset post-polio weakness, 1 of 6 with some evidence of clinical deterioration, but none of 20 without inexplicable signs of post-polio weakness. Enteroviral RNA was also detected in spinal cord from 2 of 3 patients who died from other causes during this study. These studies provide virological evidence that enteroviruses may persist in the CNS of man. Further study is required in order to understand fully the biological and clinical significance of these findings.
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