Devos P, Destée A, Prin L, Warot P
Rev Neurol (Paris). 1984;140(8-9):513-5.
At 20 year-old a patient developed a paraplegia which regressed within several months, suggestive of an acute myelitis. Subsequently, several episodes of spastic paraplegia, posterior tracts lesions and retrobulbar optic neuritis, a transient cerebellar syndrome, modifications in cerebrospinal fluid (pleiocytosis, hypergammaglobulin levels, elevated Delpech's ratio) suggested multiple sclerosis. When aged 62 years, the patient developed articular lesions, Raynaud's phenomenon, and buccal ulcers attributed to lupus. LE cells, native DNA anti-antibodies, anti-Sm auto antibodies on immunofluorescence were present. The possibility of a collagen disease, expressed initially and for a long period in an exclusively neurological disorder is discussed. It was considered, however, to be more likely two distinct affections. This association has been reported very rarely, even though two immunity-mediated inflammatory affections are involved.