Neuromuscular symptoms associated with SARS have also been reported. A 51-year-old woman in Taiwan developed probable SARS shortly after her husband was diagnosed [44]. She was hospitalized and intubated and had no evidence of respiratory syncytial virus; however, a bone-marrow biopsy showed evidence of infection-related hemophagocytic syndrome. Her condition gradually improved and she was extubated, but she complained of weakness, numbness, and paresthesia in her legs. Ten days after extubation, a neurological examination showed good mental clarity with intact cranial nerves, but symmetric loss of muscle strength in her legs and mild weakness in the hands. These conditions improved slowly and two months later, a neurological examination reported only mild loss of leg strength and slight numbness in the toes of her right foot [44].