Primary Lateral Sclerosis: A Clinical Diagnosis Reemerges

David S. Younger, Samuel Chou, Arthur P. Hays, Dale J. Lange, Ronald Emerson, Mitchell Brin, Hartwell Thompson, Lewis P. Rowland

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

126 Scopus citations

Abstract

Adults with slowly progressive non-inherited gait disorders may show no abnormalities on examination other than signs implicating the corticospinal tracts. That is the syndrome of “primary lateral sclerosis” (PLS), a clinical diagnosis that has been avoided because it is a diagnosis of exclusion, proven only at autopsy. Now, modern technology can exclude other disorders that can cause the syndrome with an accuracy of about 95%. That serves to eliminate the following: compressive lesions at the foramen magnum or cervical spinal cord, multiple sclerosis, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, Chiari malformation, syringomyelia, biochemical abnormality, and persistent infection with human immunodeficiency virus or human T-lymphotrophic virus type I. We studied three autopsy-proved cases of PLS; six living patients in whom PLS was diagnosed clinically after comprehensive evaluations that excluded the alternative diagnoses; and two patients with this syndrome of PLS and antibodies to human immunodeficiency virus seropositivity that clinically resembled PLS. Primary lateral sclerosis is now a respectable and permissible diagnosis.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1304-1307
Number of pages4
JournalArchives of Neurology
Volume45
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 1988
Externally publishedYes

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