Polio-like syndrome may be caused by several viruses, CDC says

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Nov. 13, 2018 / 5:04 PM GMT

By Maggie Fox

Patients with a polio-like condition called acute flaccid myelitis have almost all showed symptoms of viral infections before they developed symptoms, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Tuesday.

That makes viruses a prime suspect in causing the muscle weakness or paralysis that marks the condition, CDC researchers said in a new report. The viruses include one called EV-D68, but also a related virus called EV-A71 and a few others, a CDC research team said.

“Almost all patients with AFM have reported signs and symptoms consistent with viral illness in the weeks preceding limb weakness,” the CDC team, led by Susannah McKay of the CDC’s viral disease division, wrote in their report.

Viruses could directly damage the spinal cord. “Another possibility is that the pathogen triggered an immune response in the body that causes damage to the spinal cord,” the CDC’s Dr. Nancy Messonnier told reporters in a telephone briefing.

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