Abstract

We describe visual, brain stem auditory, and somatosensory evoked (VEP, BAEP, SEP) in a 49-year old male patient presenting with subacute degeneration of the spinal cord due to vitamin B12 deficiency. Neurological signs included tetraplegia with a C4-C5 spinal cord compression that was unchanged after surgical decompression. Before treatment, the duration of the bilateral VEP was slightly increased, though their amplitude and morphology were not modified. BAEP were normal. However, abnormalities of SEP with loss of cortical potentials were noticed. Two months after initiation of the treatment, both VEP and SEP recorded in response to median nerve stimulation had improved, but there was still no cortical response to tibial nerve stimulation. Eighteen months later, VEP were normal and recovery of SEP in response to tibial nerve stimulation was observed; however, alterations of peripheral sensory and motor action potentials were still present. These findings are in good agreement with previously reported pathological changes in patients presenting with subacute combined degeneration. Similar abnormalities have been described in patients with multiple sclerosis. Evoked potentials in this case proved to be useful for the diagnosis and the evaluation of the efficacy of the treatment. These findings also suggest that demyelination of the posterior part of the spinal cord and peripheral axonal degeneration might be the main pathological changes related to vitamin B12 deficiency. The former, but not like the latter, were clearly responsive to the treatment.

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