Data_Sheet_1_Severe Acute Flaccid Myelitis Associated With Enterovirus in Children: Two Phenotypes for Two Evolution Profiles?.DOCX AubartMelodie GitiauxCyril RouxCharles Joris LevyRaphael SchuffeneckerIsabelle MirandAudrey BachNathalie MoulinFlorence BergouniouxJean Leruez-VilleMarianne RozenbergFlore SterlinDelphine MussetLucile AntonaDenise BoddaertNathalie ZhangShen Ying KossorotoffManoelle DesguerreIsabelle 2020 <p>Acute flaccid myelitis (AFM) is an acute paralysis syndrome defined by a specific inflammation of the anterior horn cells of the spinal cord. From 2014, worrying waves of life-threatening AFM consecutive to enterovirus infection (EV-D68 and EV-A71) have been reported. We describe 10 children displaying an AFM with an EV infection, the treatments performed and the 1 to 3-years follow-up. Two groups of patients were distinguished: 6 children (“polio-like group”) had severe motor disability whereas 4 other children (“brainstem group”) displayed severe brainstem weakness requiring ventilation support. Electrodiagnostic studies (n = 8) support the presence of a motor neuronopathy associated to myelitis. The best prognosis factor seems to be the motor recovery after the first 4 weeks of the disease.</p>