Case presentation:
55 year old right handed woman with history of osteoarthritis presented with acute onset disorientation, aphasia, right arm and hand weakness/numbness, and gait instability. This was preceded by 10 days of new onset headaches, neck pain/stiffness and myalgias. The patient had no associated respiratory symptoms, seizures, or fevers. Brain MRI revealed a diffusion restricted lesion involving the splenium of the corpus callosum (SCC), mild associated FLAIR changes, without contrast enhancement. CSF studies showed a lymphocytic predominant pleocytosis at 1100 cells and elevated protein 149. There were no oligoclonal bands. CSF paraneoplastic and meningitis/encephalitis panels were negative. Extensive screen including: HIV, VDRL, Lyme, HSV, VZV, CMV, cryptococcus, ANA, ACE, ESR and CRP were unremarkable. She had no vascular risk factors or metabolic derangements. Respiratory Viral Panel resulted positive for RSV. Her neurologic symptoms resolved spontaneously after approximately one hour and there was complete resolution of SCC lesion upon repeat of brain MRI at 6 months.