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Long-term neurological and functional outcome in Nipah virus infection

โœ Scribed by James J. Sejvar; Jahangir Hossain; Sankar Kama Saha; Emily S. Gurley; Shakila Banu; Jena D. Hamadani; Mohammed Abdul Faiz; F. M. Siddiqui; Quazi Deen Mohammad; Abid Hossain Mollah; Rafique Uddin; Rajibul Alam; Ridwanur Rahman; Chong Tin Tan; William Bellini; Paul Rota; Robert F. Breiman; Stephen P. Luby


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2007
Tongue
English
Weight
244 KB
Volume
62
Category
Article
ISSN
0364-5134

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โœฆ Synopsis


Abstract

Objective

Nipah virus (NiV) is an emerging zoonosis. Central nervous system disease frequently results in high caseโ€fatality. Longโ€term neurological assessments of survivors are limited. We assessed longโ€term neurologic and functional outcomes of 22 patients surviving NiV illness in Bangladesh.

Methods

During August 2005 and May 2006, we administered a questionnaire on persistent symptoms and functional difficulties to 22 previously identified NiV infection survivors. We performed neurologic evaluations and brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).

Results

Twelve (55%) subjects were male; median age was 14.5 years (range 6โ€“50). Seventeen (77%) survived encephalitis, and 5 survived febrile illness. All but 1 subject had disabling fatigue, with a median duration of 5 months (range, 8 daysโ€“8 months). Seven encephalitis patients (32% overall), but none with febrile illness had persistent neurologic dysfunction, including static encephalopathy (n = 4), ocular motor palsies (2), cervical dystonia (2), focal weakness (2), and facial paralysis (1). Four cases had delayedโ€onset neurologic abnormalities months after acute illness. Behavioral abnormalities were reported by caregivers of over 50% of subjects under age 16. MRI abnormalities were present in 15, and included multifocal hyperintensities, cerebral atrophy, and confluent cortical and subcortical signal changes.

Interpretation

Although delayed progression to neurologic illness following Nipah fever was not observed, persistent fatigue and functional impairment was frequent. Neurologic sequelae were frequent following Nipah encephalitis. Neurologic dysfunction may persist for years after acute infection, and new neurologic dysfunction may develop after acute illness. Survivors of NiV infection may experience substantial longโ€term neurologic and functional morbidity. Ann Neurol 2007


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