Lidocaine unmasks silent symptoms and eases neuropathic pain in multiple sclerosis patients; however, the effects of lidocaine in neuromyelitis optica have never been reported. We describe the case of a 59-year-old Japanese woman with neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder who developed optic neuritis 1 day after intravenous lidocaine injection for treating allodynia. Her symptom seemed to result from a relapse of neuromyelitis optica induced by lidocaine administration, and not because of the transient effects of intravenous lidocaine administration. The possibility that lidocaine administration results in relapse of neuromyelitis optica due to its immunomodulating effects cannot be ruled out. Copyright © 2011 Akiyuki Uzawa et al.
CITATION STYLE
Uzawa, A., Mori, M., Masuda, S., Aoe, K., & Kuwabara, S. (2011). Relapse of neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorder associated with intravenous lidocaine. Case Reports in Medicine, 2011. https://doi.org/10.1155/2011/405837
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