Acanthamoeba Rhombencephalomyelitis: Novel White Matter Tract–Based Neuroinvasive Pattern in a Retrospective Observational Study from the Kerala Amoebic Meningoencephalitis Surge, 2025

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Objective: To describe a distinct rhombencephalomyelitis pattern in patients with central nervous system infection due to free – living amoebae, differing from the classical granulomatous amoebic encephalitis (GAE) phenotype. Methods: This retrospective observational study included twelve consecutive patients with brainstem and/or spinal cord involvement associated with central nervous system infection due to Acanthamoeba species at a tertiary care centre in Kerala, India. Diagnosis was confirmed by wet mount examination and amoeba species – specific 18S rRNA PCR of cerebrospinal fluid. Comprehensive evaluation excluded bacterial, mycobacterial, fungal, and autoimmune etiologies. Results: Twelve patients (seven men; median age 50 years; IQR: 33 – 60 years) presented with subacute cranial neuropathies (58.3%) and/or gait disturbance (91.7%). Seven (58.3%) were immunocompetent; only two had traditional risk factors (ritualistic nasal ablution). MR scan demonstrated involvement of the spinal cord (66.7 %), pons (58.3 %), middle cerebellar peduncle (50%), and medulla (41.7 %). This distinctive neuroimaging pattern reflected white matter tract – based spread along cerebellar peduncles and/or corticospinal tracts. CSF analysis revealed lymphocytic pleocytosis (median: 12 cells/mm 3 , IQR: 5 – 47) with hypoglycorrhachia (CSF – to – blood glucose ratio 0.45 IQR: 0.4 – 0.5). Acanthamoeba spp. were confirmed by CSF PCR in ten (83.3 %) and presumptively by wet mount examination in two (16.7%). Nine patients (75.0%) survived, of whom eight (66.7%) achieved favourable functional outcome (mRS 1 – 2) at discharge. CONCLUSION Acanthamoeba spp. causes distinct white matter tract – based non-granulomatous rhombencephalomyelitis. Neurologists should screen for free – living amoebae CNS infection even without traditional risk factors, as this pattern may mimic demyelinating disorders (NMOSD, MOGAD, ADEM, or MS). When identified early, Acanthamoeba rhombencephalomyelitis carries a favourable prognosis .

Article activity feed