: inflammation of the spinal cord or of the bone marrow
Example Sentences
Recent Examples on the WebThe case was first thought to be acute flaccid myelitis, a condition that can mimic polio, and is likely caused by a different virus. Erika Edwards, NBC News, 16 Aug. 2022 The polio-like condition, called acute flaccid myelitis or AFM, tends to peak every other year, and the last surge of cases was in 2018, when 238 cases were diagnosed across the US, the CDC said. Maggie Fox, CNN, 4 Aug. 2020 It had recently been linked with acute flaccid myelitis. Roxanne Khamsi, Scientific American, 16 Feb. 2022 According to a paper that came out last week, the missing-in-action list also includes enterovirus D68, a likely culprit behind the polio-like kids’ disease acute flaccid myelitis. Adam Rogers, Wired, 16 Mar. 2021 The record will mark their third without founding member Joey Jordison who was removed from the band’s lineup in 2013 citing transverse myelitis, a form of multiple sclerosis that hindered his ability to perform. Larisha Paul, Rolling Stone, 18 Jan. 2022 After he was diagnosed with transverse myelitis, treatment began immediately. David Hinojosa, San Antonio Express-News, 3 Dec. 2021 The condition Ardis referenced is called acute flaccid myelitis, or AFM. Miriam Fauzia, USA TODAY, 16 Sep. 2021 One person developed transverse myelitis, a rare but potentially serious neurological condition. Helen Branswell, STAT, 8 Dec. 2020 See More
Word History
Etymology
borrowed from New Latin (in German context), from Greek myelós "bone marrow" + New Latin -itis -itis — more at myelo-
Note: The word was apparently introduced by the German physician Christian Friedrich Harless (Harleß, in some of his publications Harles, 1773-1853) in "Valerian Aloys Brera über die Entzündung des Rückenmarks," Jahrbücher der teutschen Medicin und Chirurgie, 2. Band (1813), p. 244. Harless's essay purports to be a translation of "Della rachialgite - Cenni patologici" by the Italian physician Valeriano Luigi Brera (1772-1840), published in Atti dell'Accademia italiana di lettere, scienze, ed arti, tomo primo, parte prima, Livorno, 1810, pp. 247-76. Brera, however, uses only the word rachialgite for inflammation of the spinal chord, which Harless latinizes as Rhachialgitis. In a footnote introducing this word Harless adds: "Man könnte auch wohl, noch bezeichnender, für die Entzündung des Rückenmarks selbst den Namen Myelitis wählen, um so füglicher, weil μυελος bei Hippokrates, Galen, u.a. griech. Aertzen häufig ohne den Zusatz des Beiworts νωτιαιος (dorsalis) zur Bezeichnung des Rückenmarks gebraucht wird." ("One could as well also choose myelitis as a more aptly characterizing name for inflammation of the spinal marrow, the more justifiable because Hippocrates, Galen and other Greek physicians frequently used myelos without the addition of the modifying word nōtiaios (dorsalis [spinal]) as a designation for spinal marrow.")
First Known Use
1835, in the meaning defined above
Phrases Containing myelitis
acute flaccid myelitis
acute flaccid myelitis
Medical Definition
myelitis
noun
my·e·li·tis ˌmī-ə-ˈlīt-əs
plural myelitides -ˈlit-ə-ˌdēz
: inflammation of the spinal cord or of the bone marrow