1962
DOI: 10.1542/peds.29.5.808
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Acute Cerebellar Ataxia in Children Associated With Infection by Poliovirus I

Abstract: Eleven cases of acute cerebellar ataxia are presented. The patients were observed during a period of 3½ months in the course of an epidemic of type I poliomyelitis in Puerto Rico. None had typical spinal poliomyelitis. There was evidence that infection with poliovirus type I could have been responsible for clinical findings in nine patients. In two, the symptoms were probably due to a different etiology. The findings suggest an association of acute cerebellar ataxia with infection by poliovirus I. This possibi… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Our study provides compelling in vivo evidence of cerebellar changes in adult poliomyelitis survivors with reference to healthy controls. In contrast to previous postmortem studies [9,14,15] and sporadic clinical reports [16][17][18], the cohort of adult poliomyelitis survivors evaluated in this study did not exhibit cerebellar atrophy. On the contrary, polio survivors exhibited hypertrophic changes in the cerebellum.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 98%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Our study provides compelling in vivo evidence of cerebellar changes in adult poliomyelitis survivors with reference to healthy controls. In contrast to previous postmortem studies [9,14,15] and sporadic clinical reports [16][17][18], the cohort of adult poliomyelitis survivors evaluated in this study did not exhibit cerebellar atrophy. On the contrary, polio survivors exhibited hypertrophic changes in the cerebellum.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 98%
“…Accounts of involvement of cerebellar cortical layers are strikingly conflicting [9,10,14,15]. Sporadic cerebellar manifestations, such as ataxia, nystagmus, vertigo and intention tremor had been linked to poliovirus type 1 [16][17][18]. The rarity of frank cerebellar findings was hypothesised to be due to limited cerebellar degeneration and the challenge of ascertaining cerebellar signs in the presence of widespread lower motor neuron degeneration [15].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%