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Human Herpes Virus 7-related encephalopathy in children.

Thomas Foiadelli, Virginia Rossi, Stefania Paolucci, Francesca Rovida, Federica Novazzi, Alessandro Orsini, Ilaria Brambilla, Gian Luigi Marseglia, Fausto Baldanti, Salvatore Savasta

2022PubMed13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Primary HHV7 infection is almost ubiquitous, and it can present as exanthema subitem. Little is known on the clinical relevance of HHV7 neuroinvasion in immunocompetent children. METHODS: We describe 12 patients (median age 9.45 years, 50% males) with acute encephalopathy and active HHV7 infection. In all patients, HHV7-DNA was detected on cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) by RT-PCR. RESULTS: 7/12 patients had meningoencephalitis (two with ADEM and one with MOG antibody-associated CIS); 5/12 showed acute neuropsychiatric symptoms. EEG showed anomalies exclusively in patients with meningoencephalitis. Six patients had RMN anomalies. CSF HHV7 copies ranged between 20 and 3,500 copies/mL (median 66 copies/mL) and mean HHV7 CSF/blood ratio was 0.75. Outcome was favorable in all children, although 3/12 had minor neurobehavioral sequelae. Mean follow-up period of 5.2 months. CONCLUSIONS: HHV7 can determine neuroinvasion in immunocompetent children, leading to acute encephalopathy. Blood-brain barrier damage and high CSF/blood viral copies ratio correlated with a more severe presentation. We speculate on the importance of immune-mediated mechanisms in provoking clinical features.

Topics & Concepts

MeningoencephalitisEncephalopathyCerebrospinal fluidMedicineHuman herpesvirus 6PediatricsInternal medicineGastroenterologyImmunologyVirusViral diseaseHerpesviridaeCytomegalovirus and herpesvirus researchViral-associated cancers and disordersInfectious Encephalopathies and Encephalitis
Human Herpes Virus 7-related encephalopathy in children. | Litcius