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Encephalitis in childhood Roderic Smith, MD, Ph.D Pediatric Neurology Clinic Problems with studies Encephalitis remains an “orphan” disease Poor model for US style of research support, since it is not hypothesis driven Not all conditions are defined within parameters requiring public health reporting-mixture of infectious, immune and other considerations Encephalitis is a serious disorder Defined by significant CNS dysfunction High rate of mortality Higher rate of morbidity Specific diagnosis can be made 20-30% of the time. With decrease in common childhood disorders, rate of diagnosis has gone down. Direct infectious vs postinfectious Direct effects acts on neuropile or neurons and white matter: HSV, West Nile, Arbovirus Post-infectious encephalitis is best recognized as a white matter based process: influenza B, other URI Disputed mechanisms: Mycoplasma, VZV Unknown encephalitis project: California, Tennesse, New York Hospitalized w/encephalopathy (depressed or altered consciousness > 24 hrs) AND 1 or more of the following: fever (38o C) seizure(s) focal neurological findings CSF pleocytosis EEG findings c/w encephalitis abnormal neuroimaging Exclusions: < 6 months old or immunocompromised Summary of California experience 1998 Total Explained 21% Not Infectious 7% Infectious 14% Viral: 8% Bacterial: 3% Prion 1% Parasitic: <1% Fungal <1% Unknown: 79% ~7% later determined to be nonencephalitis: Neoplastic paraneoplastic (“limbic encephalitis”) Vascular; strokes, thrombosis mitochondrial diseases Autoimmune (Hashimoto’s encephalopathy, Lupus cerebritis) Viral causes HSV-1: 16 cases Enterovirus: 13 cases EBV : 6 cases Measles/SSPE; 5 cases VZV : 4 cases Rabies: 3 cases HIV (acute presentation): 2 cases West Nile : 1 case (imported) Viruses with unclear role Influenza: cases with acute infection, all negative CSF PCR Adenovirus: 1 case with serologic evidence, throat PCR positive, CSF PCR negative Rotavirus: 2 cases with PCR positive Hepatitis C: 4 cases with PCR positive Distinguishing ADEM vs other encephalitis variants Not always a clear distinction Can be difficult to distinguish from vasculitis and stroke Metabolic or even toxic disorders can mimic ADEM ADEM •History (antecedent infection or immunization) •Physical and neurologic examination •MRI imaging •Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) analysis •Response to therapy •Clinical and radiographic course over time Other variants Optic neuritis with or without papillitis Clinical features usually allow it be distinguished from papilledema – loss of acuity, color desaturation Retro-orbital form has some association with latter development of MS—”the patient sees nothing and the physician sees nothing [abnormal]”. Variants continued Mixed peripheral and central demyelination Brainstem encephalitis Higher risk for direct infection (arbovirus, HSV, Listeria) Minimal imaging findings Slow recovery Multiple sclerosis Rare cases diagnosed in first years of life, increasing after puberty Classically defined by “multiple lesions in time and space” Diagnosis has been changed by complex MRI criteria Multiple effective drugs for treatment, at least of relapsing remitting. Triggers “Non-specific” respiratory virus Influenza A, B<acute necrotizing encephalitis> Smallpox, small pox vaccination Measles, rarely vaccine-associated “Pasteur vaccine” Family history, genetics Treatment Largely supportive High dose steroids can shorten course In refractory forms, IVIG has been used Association with MS is slight, but not zero Viral causes Topavirus EEE/WEE/VEE Flavivirus: SLE, WN, JV, Dengue Bunyaviruses: LaCrosse, Paramyxoviridae: Mumps, measles Arenaviruses: LCM, Machupo, etc Enteroviruses: Polio, coxsackie, etc Reoviruses: CTF Rhabdovirus: Rabies Filoviridae: Ebola, Marburg Retroviridae: HIV Herpes: HSV1/2,VZV,EBV,CMV,HHV6 Adenovirus Non-viral RMSF/Ehrlichia chaffensis/Typhus/Relapsing fever Mycoplasma/Listeria/Leptospirosis/Lyme Nocardia/Actinomyces Tuberculosis/Cryptococcus/Histoplasma Naegleria/Acanthamoeba/Toxoplasma Plasmodium falcipirum/Trypanosomiasis Whipples/Bechets/CSD/ Vasculitis/Carcinoma/Drug reactions Immunization “Common specific disorders” HSV Most common form of sporadic, focal encephalitis in US accounts for 10% of reported cases Post-traumatic HSV-1 beyond neonatal period, HSV1 is most common (>>>HSV2) (HSV-2 can cause recurrent “Mollaret” meningitis) Treatment Acyclovir. (Note recent changes in dose and duration.) Range of dose 10-20mg/kg tid— renal issues at higher doses 15 days of therapy for HSV-2 in neonates Varicella Zoster 10 years ago--one of leading causes of encephalitis acute cerebellar ataxia OR generalized encephalitis +/- rash diagnosis: classic rash and/or PCR? permanent sequelae are uncommon even when encephalopathy is severe. Some deaths reported. VERY DIFFERENT DISORDER IN IMMUNOSUPPRESSION Enterovirus Well-established cause of viral meningitis: 60-90% role in encephalitis controversial often in summer months can be generalized or focal most outcomes benign experimental therapy: Pleconaril Rabies Often begins with non-specific prodrome Rapidly progressive CNS manifestations (Almost) invariably progresses to death Survival for more than 48-72 hours after severe neurologic symptoms develop suggests alternative explanation for mechanism EBV CNS involvement in <1% of cases Diffuse or focal (temporal/cerebellar) Often in conjunction with fever Pharnygitis, lymphadenopathy, atypical Lymphocytes, positive heterophil Diagnosis: CSF EBV PCR or serology Generally not treated— controversy regarding steroid use EBV-triggered progressive disorders XLP LYMPHOPROLIFERATIVE DISEASE, XLINKED; XLPD LYP DUNCAN DISEASE EPSTEIN-BARR VIRUS INFECTION, FAMILIAL FATAL EBV SUSCEPTIBILITY; EBVS INFECTIOUS MONONUCLEOSIS, SUSCEPTIBILITY TO IMMUNODEFICIENCY, X-LINKED PROGRESSIVE COMBINED VARIABLE IMMUNODEFICIENCY 5; IMD5 PURTILO SYNDROME Other EBV-related disorders “Chronic fatigue” --controversial often with atypical development of immune response Postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome Arboviruses World wide-the most common cause of encephalitis Transmitted via mosquito Asymptomatic or mild infection Extremely common Aseptic meningitis/encephalitis Arbovirus In US, most cases West Nile St Louis encephalitis California encephalitis Eastern equine encephalitis Western equine encephalitis Measles Acute measles encephalitis— secondary process Rarely vaccine associated SSPE—Clinical reactivation of a latent form of the virus SSPE Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis Myoclonus, seizures, behavior changes CSF changes, findings on MRI Usual a progressive, lethal disorder Mycoplasma pneumonia Recent studies--significant role in encephalitis clinical presentation widely varied Headaches, ADEM-like process, encephalitis mechanisms; direct invasion (acute) indirect/autoimmune toxin-mediated Mycoplasma (cont) Mycoplasma -- almost as important as HSV1(“leading cause of sporadic encephalitis”) From California study-2 cases PCR CSF, 11? additional cases w/acute serology positive or throat PCR positive Mechanism of action ???—most acute serology (IgM and IgG change). Throat PCR positive, but spinal fluid negative Clinically—wide range of clinical symptoms/outcome Amebic encephalitis Naegleria fowleri- swimming in warm freshwater lakes Acquire via invasion across cribiform plate CSF profile similar to bacterial meningitis Wet mount: trophozoite can be seen, but are easily mistaken for polys Balamuthia mandrillis, granulomatous encephalitis Chlamydia Chlamydia species Chlamydia pneumonia or Chlamydia psittaci 5 cases with acute infection by serology PCRs done on only subset—all negative Wide range of clinical manifestations/outcome “Cat-Scratch fever” Bartonella henselae: Relatively important 9 cases serology positive, all PCR negative Fairly sterotypic presentation: acute presentation, febrile, often seizures Normal spinal fluid, h/o cat contact Rapid recovery to baseline Other agents Borrelia species—Lyme disease and a growing number of regional Borrelia. Neurocystocercosis TB Cryptococcal Nocardia Non-infectious causes Autoimmune disorders, Lupus, Hashimoto’s, TTP Direct or distant effects of tumors Rasmussen’s encephalitis Metabolic disorders Mitochondrial “Leigh syndrome”, MELAS FAO defects Leukodystrophies, e.g. ALD Neuroblastoma Opsiclonus/ myoclonus Severe cereballar ataxia Encephalitis—limbic or posterior fossa syndrome All result of usually small, well differentiated tumors, i.e. Negative metabolites in urine Rasmussen’s encephalitis Focal intractable epilepsy Leading edge of inflammation on neuroimaging Role of anti-GLu R3 vs heteroclitic antibody response vs other NOMID/CINCA Neonatal Onset Multisystem Inflammatory Disease (NOMID) chronic infantile neurological, cutaneous and arthropathy (CINCA) syndrome. early onset of urticarial rash, arthropathy, epiphyseal overgrowth, lymphadenopathy, and central nervous anomalies. CIAS1, a gene located at chromosome 1q44, that is present in about 50% of children with NOMID. In vitro functional studies have suggested that the genetic defect identified may be directly associated with an increase in IL-1 activity. Ongoing treatment/diagnostic protocol at NIH-- Anakinra AGS/Cree encephalopathy AICARDI-GOUTIERES SYNDROME 1; AGS1 ENCEPHALOPATHY, FAMILIAL INFANTILE, WITH CALCIFICATION OF BASAL GANGLIA AND CHRONIC CEREBROSPINAL FLUID LYMPHOCYTOSIS Both have high levels of interferon alpha in CSF Gene map locus 3p21 Encephalitis classification “Reye’s like” diffuse edema, szs, acellular CSF Prominent temporal lobe involvement Epilepsia partialis continuins Acquired Myoclonus Seizures with rapid recovery Cerebellar involvement Movement disorders (dyskinesias) Prominent psychiatric disorders Lesson for Alaska Bioregionalism—many disorders are environmentally limited Populations with special risk factors; e.g. SSPE, neurocystocercosis, TB meningitis Unique animal populations with risk of human to human spead Specific groups may have risk for neurologic disorders. Conclusion Acute encephalopathy/ encephalitis is a diagnostic challenge Treatable causes need to be addressed rapidly Treatment, in most cases, will be symptomatic, even if an etiology is suspected A high level of vigilance is required for new patterns