| Literature DB >> 28761901 |
Anne Piantadosi1,2,3, Shibani S Mukerji4,4,5, Pooja Chitneni1,2,6, Tracey A Cho4,2, Lisa A Cosimi2,6, Deborah T Hung7,2,3, Marcia B Goldberg1,8, Pardis C Sabeti3,9,10,11, Daniel R Kuritzkes2,6, Yonatan H Grad2,6,10.
Abstract
Enteroviruses cause a wide spectrum of clinical disease. In this study, we describe the case of a young man with orchitis and aseptic meningitis who was diagnosed with enterovirus infection. Using unbiased "metagenomic" massively parallel sequencing, we assembled a near-complete viral genome, the first use of this method for full-genome viral sequencing from cerebrospinal fluid. We found that the genome belonged to the subgroup echovirus 30, which is a common cause of aseptic meningitis but has not been previously reported to cause orchitis.Entities:
Keywords: enterovirus; meningitis; metagenomics; orchitis
Year: 2017 PMID: 28761901 PMCID: PMC5534216 DOI: 10.1093/ofid/ofx138
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Forum Infect Dis ISSN: 2328-8957 Impact factor: 3.835
Figure 1.Maximum likelihood phylogenetic trees of (A) full-length enterovirus genomes and (B) the VP1 gene. (A) The full-length genome sequence identified in this study (“Patient USA 2016”, labeled in red) clusters with sequences belonging to the echovirus 30 subgroup (labeled in light blue). For reference, 1 coxsackie B5 sequence is included (labeled in light green). (B) The VP1 sequence identified in this study (Patient USA 2016, labeled in red) clusters with echovirus 30 sequences (labeled in light blue). Reference VP1 sequences are included from 35 subtypes representing human enterovirus B species: coxsackie B5 (labeled in light green), other coxsackie B subgroups (labeled in dark green), coxsackie A9 (labeled in purple), and other echovirus subgroups (labeled in dark blue). In both trees, branches are named with the enterovirus subtype and location and date of sequence acquisition (clinical samples) or name of reference strain (viral isolates), as well as GenBank accession number. Trees were constructed with 1000 bootstrap replicates, and nodes with at least 80% support are labeled with percent bootstrap support.
Infectious Causes of Orchitis in the Setting of Central Nervous System (CNS) Infection
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| Viruses | |
| Enterovirus | Dengue virus |
| Lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus [21] | Epstein-Barr virus |
| Mumps virus [22] | Herpes simplex virus |
| West Nile virus [23] | Human immunodeficiency virus |
| Zika virus | |
| Other | |
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aEpididymitis and orchitis typically present.