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Description
In January 2012 a 51-year-old woman was admitted to our department for a slow increasing right hemiparesis with right brisk deep tendon reflexes. She suffered from Sjogren syndrome, fibromyalgia and hepatitis B virus (healthy carrier).
Conventional MRI scans (figure 1A,B) were typical for Balò's sclerosis.1
The patient rejected a brain biopsy. In order to better define the lesion, we therefore performed advanced radiological techniques such as diffusion, spectroscopy and perfusion.
In the diffusion sequences (figure 2A) a concentric ring of unrestricted diffusion appeared clearly distinguishable.2
The spectroscopic image (figure 2B) of the lesion documented increased choline peak and decreased N-acetyl aspartate peak, but normal peaks in the normal appearing white matter near the lesion.1
The perfusion analysis (figure 2C), based on four different regions of interest (figure 2D), suggested a decreasing gradient of perfusion from the centre to the periphery of the lesion, supporting the hypothesis that the centre of the ring corresponds anatomically to a deep venous vessel.3 Authors are not aware of previous report of perfusion studies in Balò's sclerosis.
Cerebrospinal fluid analysis detected oligoclonal bands, without anti-aquaporin-4 antibodies.
High-dose intravenous methylprednisolone was started (1 g/day for 10 days) and followed by oral prednisone (1 mg/kg/day for 2 months, then slowly tapered in 2 months) with concomitant lamivudine as antiviral prophylaxis. The right paresis fully recovered after 2 weeks and has not relapsed after 11 months.
The 8 months follow-up MRI showed a reduction in the lesion volume and absence of new demyelinating lesions (figure 3A,B).
Learning points
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Balò's concentric sclerosis is a rare demyelinating disease presenting with a concentric ring in the white matter. The clinical and radiological features can mimic other diseases such as primary central nervous system lymphoma, low-grade glioma or stroke.
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A brain biopsy should be obtained whenever possible. However, nowadays advanced neuroimaging studies (spectroscopy, MRI diffusion and perfusion) seem to be a reliable tool for the diagnosis.
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Balò's sclerosis could respond very well to high-dose steroids alone or in combination with other immunosuppressive treatments (eg, plasma exchange).
Footnotes
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Competing interests None.
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Patient consent Obtained.
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Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.