| Literature DB >> 28352303 |
Ioannis N Mammas1, Maria Theodoridou2, Anna Kramvis3, Prakash Thiagarajan4, Sharryn Gardner5, Georgia Papaioannou6, Angeliki Melidou7, Maria Koutsaki8, Georgia Kostagianni9, Vassilis Achtsidis10, Chryssie Koutsaftiki11, Marcos Calachanis12, Apostolos Zaravinos13, Anne Greenough14, Demetrios A Spandidos1.
Abstract
The '2nd Workshop on Paediatric Virology', which took place on Saturday the 8th of October 2016 in Athens, Greece, provided an overview on recent views and advances on Paediatric Virology. Emphasis was given to HIV-1 management in Greece, a country under continuous financial crisis, hepatitis B vaccination in Africa, treatment options for hepatitis C virus in childhood, Zika virus in pregnancy and infancy, the burden of influenza on childhood, hand-foot-mouth disease and myocarditis associated with Coxsackie viruses. Other general topics covered included a critical evaluation of Paediatric Accident and Emergency viral infections, multimodality imaging of viral infections in children, surgical approaches of otolaryngologists to complex viral infections, new advances in the diagnosis and treatment of viral conjunctivitis and novel molecular diagnostic methods for HPV in childhood. A brief historical overview of the anti-vaccination movement was also provided, as well as presentations on the educational challenge of Paediatric Virology as a new subspecialty of Paediatrics. This review highlights selected lectures and discussions of the workshop.Entities:
Keywords: AIDS; Coxsackie viruses; ENT; HIV-1; HPV; MRI; Paediatric Virology; Zika virus; conjunctivitis; hepatitis B; hepatitis C; influenza; viral infections
Year: 2016 PMID: 28352303 PMCID: PMC5348700 DOI: 10.3892/etm.2016.3997
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Ther Med ISSN: 1792-0981 Impact factor: 2.447
Figure 1.Paediatric cases of HIV-1 infection by transmission group reported in Greece by 31/12/2014 - adapted from Hellenic Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (HCDCP) (11).
Figure 2.HCV treatment choices in children: To treat or not to treat children for HCV? - adapted from Wirth et al (30).
Figure 3.Post-varicella vasculitis and stroke: a 3-year-old boy presented with acute onset of left upper arm weakness and facial nerve palsy; there was a recent previous history of ‘gastroenteritis’. MRI performed on emergency admission revealed an extensive area of abnormal signal intensity at the region of the right basal ganglia on axial fluid attenuation inversion recovery (FLAIR) image (arrow in panel a), which presented restricted diffusion on diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) sequence (arrow in panel b) in keeping with acute ischaemic infarct. Absence of flow void on magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) was confirmed in the proximal part of the right anterior cerebral artery (ACA) (single arrow in c) and along the right middle cerebral artery (MCA) (double arrow in panel c).
Figure 4.Total number of specimens tested for influenza viruses and positive specimens for each influenza subtype during 2015–2016 in Greece-adapted from Hellenic Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (HCDCP) (71).