Bruno Niemeyer de Freitas Ribeiro1, Bernardo Carvalho Muniz2, Emerson Leandro Gasparetto3, Nina Ventura4, Edson Marchiori5. 1. Masters Student, MD, Neuroradiologist at the Instituto Estadual do Cérebro Paulo Niemeyer, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil. 2. Full Member of the Colégio Brasileiro de Radiologia e Diagnóstico por Imagem (CBR), MD, Neuroradiologist at the Instituto Estadual do Cérebro Paulo Niemeyer, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil. 3. PhD, MD, Neuroradiologist, Head of the Instituto Estadual do Cérebro Paulo Niemeyer, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil. 4. PhD, MD, Neuroradiologist at the Instituto Estadual do Cérebro Paulo Niemeyer, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil. 5. Full Professor at the Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ), Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil.
Abstract
Although infection with the Zika virus was first recognized in 1942, it received little attention until 2007, when a true pandemic spread throughout Africa, Asia, and the Americas. Since then, numerous forms of central nervous system involvement have been described, mainly malformations related to congenital infection. Although the neuroimaging findings in congenital Zika syndrome are not pathognomonic, many are quite suggestive of the diagnosis, and radiologists should be prepared to interpret such findings accordingly. The objective of this article is to review the computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging findings in congenital Zika syndrome.
Although infection with the Zika virus was first recognized in 1942, it received little attention until 2007, when a true pandemic spread throughout Africa, Asia, and the Americas. Since then, numerous forms of central nervous system involvement have been described, mainly malformations related to congenital infection. Although the neuroimaging findings in congenital Zika syndrome are not pathognomonic, many are quite suggestive of the diagnosis, and radiologists should be prepared to interpret such findings accordingly. The objective of this article is to review the computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging findings in congenital Zika syndrome.
Flaviviruses are among the most important emerging viruses known to man, being
transmitted by mosquitoes and ticks. The Zika virus (ZIKV) pandemic is the most
recent of the arthropod-borne viral diseases, following on the heels of dengue, West
Nile virus, and chikungunya, for which outbreaks were recorded in 1990, 1999, and
2013, respectively(. ZIKV is an
arbovirus of the family Flaviviridae, composed of ribonucleic acid, which was
discovered in Uganda in 1947, although the first case in humans was not reported
until 1952(. Typically, it occurs in tropical and subtropical
areas of the world, mainly in Africa and Asia, the two major lineages (Asian and
African) originating from a common ancestor(. Like other
arboviruses, ZIKV presents many barriers to the accumulation of mutations, as a
consequence of double replication in mammalian and invertebrate hosts, and the rate
of fixation of its mutations is therefore relatively slow(.Beginning in 2007, ZIKV, which had until then been confined to a narrow equatorial
zone in Africa and Asia, began to become more widespread, affecting Micronesia; in
the 2013–2014 period, there was a ZIKV epidemic in French Polynesia and New
Caledonia. Since then, there has been a progressive expansion of the virus, cases of
ZIKV infection having been reported in South America, Central America, and the
Caribbean Islands(, the displacement of people and the presence of
vectors being important factors for its dissemination.The first autochthonous ZIKV transmission in Brazil occurred in May 2015(, with probable dissemination from the Pacific region, given
that phylogenetic studies have shown high similarity (99.7% for nucleotides and
99.9% for amino acids) with the virus circulating among islands in the Pacific
Ocean(. Brazil was the
Latin American country most affected by ZIKV, approximately 1,500,000 cases being
reported in 2015 and 2016(.
Global warming and climate change, together with the El Niño phenomenon,
might have contributed to accelerating the spread of the virus and its vector,
additional factors including the low socioeconomic status and lack of awareness of
the population, as evidenced by the fact that the epidemic was more intense in
impoverished areas of the northern and northeastern regions of the country,
especially in the states of Pernambuco, Bahia, and Paraíba(.During epidemics, various forms of central nervous system (CNS) involvement
associated with ZIKV infection have been reported, such as meningoencephalitis,
Guillain-Barré syndrome, and acute disseminated encephalomyelitis(.
Simultaneously, numerous cases of CNS malformations potentially related to
congenital ZIKV infection, characterizing congenital Zika syndrome, have gained
prominence in the scientific community, having been widely documented by computed
tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).Although the neuroimaging findings in congenital Zika syndrome are not pathognomonic,
many are quite suggestive of the diagnosis, and radiologists should be prepared to
recognize those findings, interpret them, and propose the diagnosis. The objective
of this article is to review the CT and MRI findings in congenital Zika syndrome. To
that end, we searched the PubMed database using the following search terms: “Zika
virus”; “congenital Zika virus infection”; “zika neuroimaging”; “zika magnetic
resonance imaging”; “zika computed tomography”; and “zika ultrasound”. We analyzed
articles indexed up through May 2017.
ZIKV TRANSMISSION
The transmission of ZIKV occurs mainly by the bite of mosquitoes of the genus
Aedes, which are common in the tropics and are also recognized
vectors of dengue fever, yellow fever, and chikungunya. Although the main vector of
ZIKV transmission is A. aegypti, other Aedes
species, such as A. albopictus, A. africanus,
A. luteocephalus, A. vittatus, A.
furcifer, A. hensilli and A.
apicoargenteus, can transmit the virus, as can mosquitoes of the genera
Anopheles, Eretmapodites,
Culex, and Mansonia(.Aedes aegypti is widely distributed in the Americas, usually lives
in close proximity to people and their homes, lays its eggs in still waters, as well
as in water that collects in buckets, flowerpots, empty pipes, and other containers,
and bites mainly during the daytime(.The infection cycle begins when Aedes species ingest ZIKV-infected
blood, which initiates a process of viral replication in the epithelial cells of the
midgut and migration of the virus to the salivary glands of the mosquito; after 5–10
days, the mosquito is able to transmit the virus to healthy individuals(. Other forms of transmission, such as blood transfusion, sexual
(oral, anal, or vaginal) transmission, vertical (transplacental or perinatal)
transmission, and transmission via urine, have been described(. Because most patients infected with ZIKV are
asymptomatic, there is an extremely high risk of blood donors acting as a source of
transmission in endemic areas(.
Other suspected routes of ZIKA transmission include monkey bite, organ
transplantation, and hemodialysis(. In kidney transplantation, the risk of ZIKV infection should
be considered if the donor is a resident of or is returning from an endemic area,
given ZIKV can be detected in the urine of people infected for more than 30
days(. Despite the fact
that the viral particle has been isolated in breast milk, there is as yet no
evidence of transmission through breastfeeding, although that route of transmission
has been described for other flaviviruses(.
CLINICAL ASPECTS OF ZIKV INFECTION
In 75–80% of cases, ZIKV infection is asymptomatic(. In symptomatic cases, after an incubation period
that typically lasts for 3–12 days, the most common manifestation is a self-limiting
profile—low-grade fever (37.8–38.5ºC); headache; muscle aches; pain in the small
joints of the hands and feet; non-purulent conjunctivitis; ocular pain; prostration;
and pruritic maculopapular rash—similar to that of dengue, albeit milder and
typically evolving to regression of the symptoms in 2–7 days(. Hematological and
biochemical parameters are usually normal(. After the first
infection, the person develops immunity and will not develop the disease if again
exposed to the virus(.Although severe and fatal forms of ZIKV are quite rare, cases of
Guillain-Barré syndrome, meningoencephalitis, and acute disseminated
encephalomyelitis have been reported(, such cases having been
attributed to the high degree of tropism of ZIKV for the CNS(.
DIAGNOSIS
Fauci et al.( reported that the
diagnosis of ZIKV infection can be made mainly on the basis of the clinical
findings. However, the authors stated that this is only applicable in areas in which
there is a current ZIKV epidemic and other diseases with a similar clinical
presentation, such as dengue and chikungunya, are not endemic.The diagnosis of ZIKV can be confirmed through amplification of the viral genome by
reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) in samples of blood,
saliva, urine, cerebrospinal fluid and amniotic fluid, although the RT-PCR procedure
is expensive and subject to contamination. In addition, due to the kinetics of ZIKVviremia, the timing of the investigation depends on the material
collected(: in blood
and saliva, RT-PCR can be performed only up until the seventh day after the onset of
symptoms; in urine, the virus can be detected for more than 30 days after the onset
of symptoms; and, in male patients, the virus can be detected in semen within the
first 3–8 weeks after the onset of symptoms. Serological tests for the detection of
immunoglobulin M antibodies against ZIKV are usually conducted 4–5 days after the
onset of symptoms, and those antibodies can remain detectable for an additional 2–3
months, as has been reported for other flaviviruses(.
TREATMENT
Because ZIKV infection is usually self-limiting, the treatment consists of increased
fluid intake and rest. Pharmacological treatment should be restricted to symptom
relief(.There are as yet no vaccines or antiviral therapies for ZIKV infection. Therefore,
preventive measures, focusing on vector eradication—such as reducing the number of
water reservoirs available for oviposition and using insecticides—and on mosquito
bite avoidance—such as the use of repellents—are fundamental as the best form of
controlling the disease(. It is also recommended that to
that travelers returning from endemic areas to nonendemic areas be advised to use
repellents for a minimum of 14 days, in order to prevent local mosquitoes from
getting the virus(. Patients with
clinical signs of the disease and individuals returning from endemic areas should
also be advised to use condoms or abstain from sex, especially if their partner is
pregnant(. Some health authorities also recommend that women
avoid becoming pregnant during ZIKV epidemics and that those who are pregnant or
intending to become pregnant avoid traveling to endemic areas(. Pregnant women who are symptomatic
should be tested for ZIKV by RT-PCR, as should those in whom there is evidence of
microcephaly on ultrasound. In the latter cases, follow-up ultrasound examinations
should be performed every 3–4 weeks(.Recently, the vector control group of the World Health Organization discussed the use
of genetically modified mosquitoes for the control of A. aegypti.
By competing with wild A. aegypti males, the male OX513A mosquito
was successful in controlling dengue in Brazil(.
CAUSALITY OF MALFORMATIONS AND CONGENITAL ZIKV INFECTION
The cautious approach to implicating ZIKV as a cause of birth defects is not
surprising, given that the last epidemic of birth defects caused by an infectious
pathogen (the rubella virus) occurred more than 50 years ago(. In addition, no flaviviruses
have been definitively demonstrated to be a cause of birth defects in humans and
there have been no reports of adverse pregnancy events during previous ZIKV
outbreaks(.Two methods have been used in order to identify potential teratogens: the
identification of the combination of a rare exposure and presentation of a rare
defect, as was the case for rubella virus, which was identified by an
ophthalmologist after noticing a characteristic form of cataract in children born to
mothers with rubella infection during pregnancy(; and the
identification of a causal relationship, which can be achieved through the use of
epidemiological studies, as in the case of valproic acid, which was identified as a
teratogen after a case-control study demonstrated a 20-fold increase in the
incidence of spina bifida when valproic acid was administered during the first
trimester of pregnancy(. In 1994, Thomas Shepard, a
pioneer in the field of teratology, proposed seven criteria, including those
previously cited, to confirm teratogenicity(. According to the Shepard system, causality is established
through a rare exposure-rare defect approach—when criteria 1, 3, and 4 (as defined
below) are met—or through an epidemiological approach—when criteria 1, 2, and 3 (as
defined below) are met(.In the Shepard system, criterion 1 is exposure to a given agent at a critical time
during the course of the pregnancy. Microcephaly and other brain abnormalities that
have been observed in many infants are consistent with infection occurring in the
first trimester or at the beginning of the second trimester of pregnancy. An
analysis of the time to biochemical confirmation of ZIKV transmission in certain
Brazilian states and of the increased incidence of microcephaly identified the first
trimester of pregnancy as the critical period of ZIKV infection(.Criterion 2 in the Shepard system is the existence of at least two high-quality
epidemiological studies supporting the association. Data from Brazil and French
Polynesia demonstrated temporal and geographic associations between ZIKV infection
and the subsequent appearance of infants with congenital microcephaly(. In one of those studies, conducted during the outbreak in
Brazil, 88 pregnant women with a skin rash were tested for ZIKV RNA. Of the 72 who
tested positive, 42 underwent ultrasound. Among those 42 women, fetal abnormalities
were observed in 12 (29%). The 16 women who tested negative did not present
abnormalities on the ultrasound examination(. Although those studies provided important evidence of a
causal relationship, they presented limitations, as cited by their
authors(,
including a lack of control for confounding factors and a relatively small number of
cases. Therefore, criterion 2 is not strictly met.Shepard system criterion 3 is a specific defect or syndrome occurring after exposure
to a given teratogen. In fact, many fetuses and infants with congenital ZIKV
infection have presented a characteristic appearance, including severe microcephaly,
intracranial calcifications and other brain abnormalities, sometimes accompanied by
ocular alterations, cutis verticis gyrata (excessive scalp skin), arthrogryposis,
and talipes equinovarus (clubfoot), leading some authors to coin the term
“congenital Zika syndrome” to describe the presentation(. In
addition, cutis verticis gyrata is not a typical finding in other forms of
microcephaly.Criterion 4 in the Shepard system is an association between a rare exposure and the
subsequent appearance of a rare defect, the rationale of which is that it is
unlikely that two rare events will occur in conjunction, especially with the
appropriate chronology to suggest causation. Microcephaly is a rare defect estimated
to occur in 6 out of 10,000 live births in the United States(. Although exposure to ZIKV was
not uncommon among women residing in Brazil during the outbreak, there were reports
of adverse events in fetuses among female travelers who were in endemic areas for
only a short time, constituting a rare exposure(. In one report,
a European woman presented fever and a skin rash at the end of week 13 of gestation,
while in the state of Rio Grande do Norte, in northeastern Brazil. Prior to that,
the woman had undergone a number of ultrasound examinations, none of which had shown
any abnormalities. However, ultrasound performed at 29 weeks of gestation revealed
multiple cerebral malformations. The fetus was aborted, and an autopsy was
conducted. All organs were examined, as were the placenta and umbilical cord. The
findings included microcephaly, pachygyria/lissencephaly, and hydrocephalus,
together with multifocal dystrophic calcifications in the cortex and subcortical
white matter, as well as signs of local inflammation and placental calcifications.
There were no relevant pathological abnormalities in the remaining organs, and
RT-PCR of the brain tissue was positive only for ZIKV, no other flaviviruses being
identified. The ZIKV strain identified bore a high (99.7%) resemblance to the Asian
lineage identified in the outbreak that occurred in French Polynesia in
2013(.Shepard system criterion 5 is the finding of teratogenicity in animal models. Animal
studies of ZIKV have demonstrated not only its neurotropism but also its teratogenic
potential(.Criterion 6 in the Shepard system is that the association makes biological sense.
Such sense has clearly been demonstrated, given that other viral agents have similar
effects, as well as the fact that studies have shown that ZIKV has a high degree of
tropism for and a deleterious effect on fetal brain tissue(.The criterion 7 in the Shepard system is used only for exposure to medications and
chemicals. Therefore, it does not apply to exposure to infectious agents.In view of the above, according to the Shepard system, there is strong evidence that
ZIKV is a teratogen.
MANIFESTATIONS OF CONGENITAL ZIKV INFECTION
The effects of intrauterine ZIKV infection are more severe when they occur in the
first or second trimesters of pregnancy, especially in the first trimester, ranging
from fetal death to various congenital abnormalities, which include cutis verticis
gyrata (of the scalp, neck, or both), low birth weight, polyhydramnios, anasarca,
arthrogryposis, and hearing loss, as well as ocular and CNS malformations with
craniofacial manifestations(.Of all the congenital manifestations of ZIKV infection, the one that has had the
greatest impact is microcephaly, which has been well documented, in Brazil and
French Polynesia, and has been associated with the Asian lineage of the virus.
During the ZIKV epidemic in Brazil (from March 2015 to February 2016), there was a
20-fold increase in the incidence of microcephaly in comparison with previous
years(.In the literature, there is no consensus regarding the definition of microcephaly.
Microcephaly is a brain growth disorder in which the head circumference is smaller
than that expected for age, gender, and race; the cut-off value can be the 3rd or
5th percentile or 2–3 standard deviations below the mean(. It can
be caused by numerous conditions, including genetic disorders and infectious
diseases (rubella, cytomegalovirus infection, toxoplasmosis, herpes virus infection,
HIV infection), as well as exposure to alcohol, drugs, or other toxic substances
present in the environment. Clinically, patients with microcephaly present severe
neurological impairment, common symptoms being hypertonia, spasticity, and
seizures(.The pathogenesis of ZIKV microcephaly is not fully understood, although it is
believed to begin with placental infection. In the placental tissue of pregnant
women infected with ZIKV, Noronha et al.( detected viral proteins in Hofbauer cells and some
histiocytes in the intervillous spaces, suggesting that ZIKV damages the placental
barrier, inducing chronic placentitis(, as has also been documented in rats(. As gestation progresses, the
virus disseminates to the fetal brain, where it preferentially infects neuronal
progenitor cells, decreasing their viability and impeding their growth, thus
inhibiting cell proliferation, cell differentiation, and neuronal apoptosis, with
consequent thinning of the cortex and macroscopic signs of microcephaly(. It has also been suggested that the placental inflammatory
process can act in synergy with cerebral ZIKV infection in the genesis of brain
malformations(.Despite the neurotropism of ZIKV, there have been no reports of microcephaly in
infected children soon after birth. That is probably attributable to the low
infective potential of ZIKV in developed neural cells(.
NEUROIMAGING FINDINGS IN CONGENITAL ZIKA SYNDROME
In CT and MRI studies of congenital Zika syndrome, the findings most commonly
reported are a reduction in head circumference and a dramatic reduction in brain
volume, both of which are indicative of microcephaly and are more common when the
infection occurs in the first trimester of pregnancy, with a risk of
1–13%(. Microcephaly can be asymmetric. The condition is
mild in 25% of cases and moderate-to-severe in 75%(.An uncommon appearance of the skull, a finding that is common in congenital Zika
syndrome and uncommon in microcephaly of other causes, is characterized by a
collapsed aspect of the skull cap, with overlapping sutures and prominent occipital
bones, creating a “shelf” appearance, commonly accompanied by excessive, folded skin
on the scalp (Figure 1). That presentation
could be due, in part, to the continued growth of the skull and skin while the size
of the brain regresses, or even, at some point, collapse of the skull, which
previously had larger dimensions due to cerebral ventriculomegaly(. One unusual finding that occurs in some newborns and
suggests the latter hypothesis is herniation of the orbital fat to the skull, which
could be secondary to the abrupt deformation of the skull, rather than direct
infection of the eye, as occurs in other congenital infections(.
Figure 1
A 3-month-old patient. Sagittal T1-weighted MRI slice, without contrast,
showing craniofacial disproportion with a microcephalic aspect, together
with occipital prominence and cutis verticis gyrata (arrowheads). Note
also the confluence of the enlarged dural venous sinuses and the
heterogeneous material (arrow).
A 3-month-old patient. Sagittal T1-weighted MRI slice, without contrast,
showing craniofacial disproportion with a microcephalic aspect, together
with occipital prominence and cutis verticis gyrata (arrowheads). Note
also the confluence of the enlarged dural venous sinuses and the
heterogeneous material (arrow).Abnormalities of cortical development are frequent findings, occurring in 94–100% of
cases, commonly presenting as agyria-pachygyria (Figure 2), and probably varying according to the stage of cortical
development in which the infection occurs(. The involvement
is usually diffuse, predominantly occurring in the frontal, insular, and parietal
lobes, with varying degrees of severity; it is frequently accompanied by wide
sylvian and interhemispheric fissures, as well as by an increase in the extra-axial
cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) space, the last being associated with a loss of brain
volume and impaired CSF reabsorption(. Gray matter
heterotopia is rare(.
Figure 2
A 2-month-old patient. Axial T2-weighted MRI slice showing marked
simplification of the gyral pattern, with agyria (arrows). Note also the
diffuse increase in the extra-axial CSF space (asterisks).
A 2-month-old patient. Axial T2-weighted MRI slice showing marked
simplification of the gyral pattern, with agyria (arrows). Note also the
diffuse increase in the extra-axial CSF space (asterisks).Calcifications are common in congenital Zika syndrome, occurring in 88–100% of
patients; unlike classic infections (toxoplasmosis, rubella, cytomegalovirus, herpes
simplex, HIV, and syphilis), in which calcifications are periventricular and
cortical, ZIKV infection tends to involve the cortical-subcortical junction (Figure 3); one possible explanation is that ZIKV
infection has a vascular component, given that other processes that mainly affect
this region are associated with vascular alterations(. As
illustrated in Figure 4, there are other sites
that present calcifications in ZIKV infection(, which are, in
descending order of frequency, the following: the basal nuclei and thalamus (in
29–65% of cases); the periventricular region (in 14–65%); the cortical region (in
14–24%); and the infratentorial region (in 4–18%). It is noteworthy that
periventricular and cortical involvement are more common in newborns in whom there
is a significant loss of brain parenchymal volume; therefore, the precise location
of calcifications in such newborns is difficult to determine(. According to Oliveira-Szejnfeld
et al., infratentorial calcifications are present in more severe manifestations,
being accompanied by brainstem malformation, aqueduct stenosis, and secondary
hydrocephalus(.
Figure 3
A: A 2-month-old patient. Axial T1-weighted MRI slice, without contrast,
showing multiple punctate foci of hyperintensity at the
cortical-subcortical junction of the frontal and parietal lobes,
indicative of calcifications (arrows). Note also the cutis verticis
gyrata (arrowheads). B: A 6-month-old patient. Axial
susceptibility-weighted MRI sequence showing foci of hypointensity at
the cortical-subcortical junction, affecting both hemispheres of the
brain and more conspicuous in the frontal regions, because of the
presence of calcifications (arrows).
Figure 4
A: A 5-month-old patient. Axial CT scan, without contrast, showing foci
of calcification in the basal nuclei (arrows) and left thalamus
(arrowhead). B: A 5-month-old patient. Axial CT scan, without contrast,
showing calcifications in the dorsolateral regions of the mesencephalic
tegmentum (arrows), as well as at the cortical-subcortical junction in
the temporal lobes (arrowheads).
A: A 2-month-old patient. Axial T1-weighted MRI slice, without contrast,
showing multiple punctate foci of hyperintensity at the
cortical-subcortical junction of the frontal and parietal lobes,
indicative of calcifications (arrows). Note also the cutis verticis
gyrata (arrowheads). B: A 6-month-old patient. Axial
susceptibility-weighted MRI sequence showing foci of hypointensity at
the cortical-subcortical junction, affecting both hemispheres of the
brain and more conspicuous in the frontal regions, because of the
presence of calcifications (arrows).A: A 5-month-old patient. Axial CT scan, without contrast, showing foci
of calcification in the basal nuclei (arrows) and left thalamus
(arrowhead). B: A 5-month-old patient. Axial CT scan, without contrast,
showing calcifications in the dorsolateral regions of the mesencephalic
tegmentum (arrows), as well as at the cortical-subcortical junction in
the temporal lobes (arrowheads).There are inherent differences between CT and MRI, the former presenting greater
sensitivity in the detection of calcifications even when compared with
susceptibility-weighted MRI sequences, whereas MRI presents a greater capacity for
characterizing cortical abnormalities and the development of the corpus
callosum(.Enlargement of the lateral ventricles, as depicted in Figure 5, is common, occurring in 94–100% of cases; in most cases, it is
moderate-to-pronounced and symmetric; it is accompanied by septations in 10–29% of
cases, and occipital horns are commonly seen, sometimes making it difficult to
distinguish periventricular cysts(. It should also
be borne in mind that the presence of ventriculomegaly is directly related to a
reduction in brain volume and can cause the head circumference to remain normal or
even increase(.
Figure 5
A: A 7-month-old patient. Magnetic resonance imaging, T2, axial section
showing diffuse enlargement of the lateral ventricles (asterisks) and
simplification of the gyral pattern (arrowheads). B: An 8-month-old
patient. Axial T2-weighted MRI slice showing asymmetric dilation of the
posterior portions of the lateral ventricles (asterisks), constituting a
colpocephaly configuration.
A: A 7-month-old patient. Magnetic resonance imaging, T2, axial section
showing diffuse enlargement of the lateral ventricles (asterisks) and
simplification of the gyral pattern (arrowheads). B: An 8-month-old
patient. Axial T2-weighted MRI slice showing asymmetric dilation of the
posterior portions of the lateral ventricles (asterisks), constituting a
colpocephaly configuration.Hypoplasia, dysgenesis, and agenesis of the corpus callosum are often seen in
congenital Zika syndrome (Figure 6), reportedly
occurring in 75–94% of cases and presenting a direct correlation with parenchymal
damage(. Other associated abnormalities are hippocampal
malformation and thickening of the fornix(.
Figure 6
A 3-month-old patient. Sagittal T1-weighted MRI slice, without contrast,
showing diffuse tapering of the corpus callosum (arrows). Note also the
craniofacial disproportion with a microcephalic aspect.
A 3-month-old patient. Sagittal T1-weighted MRI slice, without contrast,
showing diffuse tapering of the corpus callosum (arrows). Note also the
craniofacial disproportion with a microcephalic aspect.Brainstem abnormalities, which have been reported in 21–70% of patients with
congenital ZIKV infection, are characterized by a tapered, atrophic encephalic trunk
with preferential involvement of the pons (Figure
7), are commonly associated with more severe conditions and can be
related to synergism between the reduction in the number of descending fibers and
the direct effects of the virus(. Other abnormalities of the
posterior fossa include cerebellar hypoplasia, which is usually diffuse and
symmetric (Figure 8), occurring in 27–82% of
cases, and an enlarged cisterna magna, the frequency of which increases in
proportion to the severity of the infection, although there is no direct correlation
between enlarged cisterna magna and the occurrence of cerebellar
hypoplasia(.
Figure 7
A 2-month-old patient. Sagittal T1-weighted MRI slice, without contrast,
showing hypoplasia of the pons (arrow), with loss of the usual
convexity. Also shown are an enlarged cisterna magna (asterisk), reduced
cerebellar volume, and excessive skin in the nuchal region
(arrowheads).
Figure 8
A 2-month-old patient. Axial T2-weighted MRI slice showing diffuse,
symmetric cerebellar hypoplasia (arrows), with prominence of the CSF
spaces in the posterior fossa.
A 2-month-old patient. Sagittal T1-weighted MRI slice, without contrast,
showing hypoplasia of the pons (arrow), with loss of the usual
convexity. Also shown are an enlarged cisterna magna (asterisk), reduced
cerebellar volume, and excessive skin in the nuchal region
(arrowheads).A 2-month-old patient. Axial T2-weighted MRI slice showing diffuse,
symmetric cerebellar hypoplasia (arrows), with prominence of the CSF
spaces in the posterior fossa.Alteration of the white matter MRI signal secondary to a delay in myelination is seen
in 88–100% of cases of congenital ZIKV infection. Confluence of the enlarged dural
venous sinuses with heterogeneous material (Figure
1), which can correspond to a thrombus or a hematocrit effect due to
dehydration with hemoconcentration, is seen in 28–53% of cases(.Currently, there are three severity spectra in congenital Zika syndrome(: with microcephaly at birth,
presenting all of the abnormalities described in the literature and with a symmetric
appearance; with postnatal microcephaly, the presentation of which is comparable to
that of microcephaly at birth, minus the calcifications outside the
cortical-subcortical junction and the agyria; and without microcephaly, which
presents with calcifications restricted to the cortical-subcortical junction, areas
of pachygyria, a delay in myelination, and slight ventricular enlargement, with an
asymmetric appearance. In addition, as proposed by Aragão et al.(, the presence of polymicrogyria
mainly in the frontal lobes is seen only in patients without microcephaly or with
postnatal microcephaly.Recently, spinal and nerve root changes have been described in congenital Zika
syndrome, the severity of those changes presenting an apparent correlation with
arthrogryposis, defined as contracture of two or more joints from birth(. Visual inspection of T2-weighted
MRI sequences in the sagittal and axial planes has revealed a significant reduction
in the thickness of the entire spinal cord, accompanied by a significant reduction
in the thickness of the anterior roots of the medullary cone, in patients with
congenital Zika syndrome and arthrogryposis. However, patients who do not present
such joint changes have been found to show a reduction in spinal thickness only in
the dorsal region and only discrete tapering of the anterior roots of the medullary
cone (Figure 9)(. Clear involvement of the descending anterior
medullary tracts, with apparent preservation of ascending posterior tracts, has also
been seen, as reported by Mlakar et al.(.
Figure 9
A 14-month-old patient. Sagittal T1-weighted MRI slice showing tapering
of the dorsal medulla (arrows) in a congenital Zika syndrome patient
without arthrogryposis. Also shown are pontine hypoplasia (arrowhead)
and an enlarged cisterna magna (asterisk).
A 14-month-old patient. Sagittal T1-weighted MRI slice showing tapering
of the dorsal medulla (arrows) in a congenital Zika syndromepatient
without arthrogryposis. Also shown are pontine hypoplasia (arrowhead)
and an enlarged cisterna magna (asterisk).Aragão et al.( showed
that arthrogryposis correlates with greater severity of brain damage, with a greater
number of cerebral calcifications and a greater chance of infratentorial
calcifications, as well as a greater chance of hypoplasia of the brainstem and
cerebellum. In addition, all of the cases in which there was arthrogryposis have
presented with pachygyria and an absence of polymicrogyria, which could indicate
that congenital Zika syndrome with arthrogryposis occurs in the earlier stages of
fetal development, because pachygyria results from failure of neuronal migration and
of cortical organization between weeks 12 and 16 of gestation, whereas
polymicrogyria occurs around week 20(.
CONCLUSION
Fetal infection with ZIKV causes severe CNS developmental abnormalities. Although the
neuroimaging findings are not pathognomonic, they can be suggestive of congenital
Zika syndrome when the clinical and biochemical data are consistent with the
diagnosis.The main findings in congenital Zika syndrome are craniofacial disproportion with a
microcephalic aspect, accompanied by calcifications (predominantly at the
cortical-subcortical junction), malformations of cortical development,
ventriculomegaly, and abnormalities in the formation of the corpus callosum.
However, attention should be paid to the spectrum of potential presentations of
congenital Zika syndrome, and the possibility of ZIKV involvement should not be
ruled out when microcephaly is not present or when the neuroimaging findings are
more subtle.
Authors: Adriano N Hazin; Andrea Poretti; Danielle Di Cavalcanti Souza Cruz; Marli Tenorio; Ana van der Linden; Lindomar Jose Pena; Carlos Brito; Laura H Vega Gil; Demócrito de Barros Miranda-Filho; Ernesto Torres de Azevedo Marques; Celina M Turchi Martelli; João G Bezerra Alves; Thierry A Huisman Journal: N Engl J Med Date: 2016-04-06 Impact factor: 91.245
Authors: Patrícia Brasil; José P Pereira; M Elisabeth Moreira; Rita M Ribeiro Nogueira; Luana Damasceno; Mayumi Wakimoto; Renata S Rabello; Stephanie G Valderramos; Umme-Aiman Halai; Tania S Salles; Andrea A Zin; Dafne Horovitz; Pedro Daltro; Marcia Boechat; Claudia Raja Gabaglia; Patrícia Carvalho de Sequeira; José H Pilotto; Raquel Medialdea-Carrera; Denise Cotrim da Cunha; Liege M Abreu de Carvalho; Marcos Pone; André Machado Siqueira; Guilherme A Calvet; Ana E Rodrigues Baião; Elizabeth S Neves; Paulo R Nassar de Carvalho; Renata H Hasue; Peter B Marschik; Christa Einspieler; Carla Janzen; James D Cherry; Ana M Bispo de Filippis; Karin Nielsen-Saines Journal: N Engl J Med Date: 2016-03-04 Impact factor: 91.245
Authors: Rita W Driggers; Cheng-Ying Ho; Essi M Korhonen; Suvi Kuivanen; Anne J Jääskeläinen; Teemu Smura; Avi Rosenberg; D Ashley Hill; Roberta L DeBiasi; Gilbert Vezina; Julia Timofeev; Fausto J Rodriguez; Lev Levanov; Jennifer Razak; Preetha Iyengar; Andrew Hennenfent; Richard Kennedy; Robert Lanciotti; Adre du Plessis; Olli Vapalahti Journal: N Engl J Med Date: 2016-03-30 Impact factor: 91.245
Authors: Zachary A Klase; Svetlana Khakhina; Adriano De Bernardi Schneider; Michael V Callahan; Jill Glasspool-Malone; Robert Malone Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis Date: 2016-08-25
Authors: Ana Paula Pinho Matos; Luciana de Barros Duarte; Pedro Teixeira Castro; Pedro Daltro; Heron Werner Júnior; Edward Araujo Júnior Journal: Radiol Bras Date: 2018 May-Jun
Authors: Ana Paula Pinho Matos; Luciana de Barros Duarte; Pedro Teixeira Castro; Pedro Daltro; Heron Werner Júnior; Edward Araujo Júnior Journal: Radiol Bras Date: 2018 Mar-Apr
Authors: Leão Vhp; M M Aragão; R S Pinho; A N Hazin; A R Paciorkowski; A C Penalva de Oliveira; Marcelo Rodrigues Masruha Journal: Curr Neurol Neurosci Rep Date: 2020-09-03 Impact factor: 5.081
Authors: Fernanda de Brito Matiello; Jeniffer Stephanie Marques Hilário; Ellen Cristina Gondim; Darci Neves Santos; Débora Falleiros de Mello Journal: Rev Paul Pediatr Date: 2021-07-07