| Literature DB >> 30014839 |
Patrick J Howlett, Anna R Walder, Durodami R Lisk, Felicity Fitzgerald, Stephen Sevalie, Marta Lado, Abdul N'jai, Colin S Brown, Foday Sahr, Foday Sesay, Jonathon M Read, Paul J Steptoe, Nicholas A V Beare, Reena Dwivedi, Marylou Solbrig, Gibrilla F Deen, Tom Solomon, Malcolm G Semple, Janet T Scott.
Abstract
We describe a case series of 35 Ebola virus disease (EVD) survivors during the epidemic in West Africa who had neurologic and accompanying psychiatric sequelae. Survivors meeting neurologic criteria were invited from a cohort of 361 EVD survivors to attend a preliminary clinic. Those whose severe neurologic features were documented in the preliminary clinic were referred for specialist neurologic evaluation, ophthalmologic examination, and psychiatric assessment. Of 35 survivors with neurologic sequelae, 13 had migraine headache, 2 stroke, 2 peripheral sensory neuropathy, and 2 peripheral nerve lesions. Of brain computed tomography scans of 17 patients, 3 showed cerebral and/or cerebellar atrophy and 2 confirmed strokes. Sixteen patients required mental health followup; psychiatric disorders were diagnosed in 5. The 10 patients who experienced greatest disability had co-existing physical and mental health conditions. EVD survivors may have ongoing central and peripheral nervous system disorders, including previously unrecognized migraine headaches and stroke.Entities:
Keywords: 34 Military Hospital; 34MH; 34th Military Hospital; Ebola; Freetown; Military Hospital 34; Sierra Leone; West Africa; choriomeningioencephalitis; meningitis; meningoencephalitis; migraine; neurologic; ophthalmic; psychiatric; viral sequelae; viruses
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30014839 PMCID: PMC6056101 DOI: 10.3201/eid2408.171367
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Symptom-based criteria used to select patients for assessment in study of severe neurologic sequelae among Ebola virus disease survivors, Sierre Leone
| Major selection criteria | Minor selection criteria |
|---|---|
| Focal weakness | Headache |
| Tremor | Insomnia |
| Altered sensation | Weakness |
| Vision loss | Loss of appetite |
| Deafness | Blurred vision |
| Anxiety | Dizziness |
| Confusion |
|
| Depression |
|
| Psychosis |
|
| Inability to balance |
|
| Auditory disturbance |
|
| Tinnitus |
|
| Double vision | |
*Patients were selected for inclusion in a preliminary clinic examination if they exhibited >1 major or >2 minor criteria.
Figure 1Flowchart showing clinic referral process from initial patient cohort to preliminary clinic and then specialist clinics in study of severe neurologic sequelae among Ebola virus disease survivors, Sierre Leone. Criteria for selection for preliminary clinic assessment from the 34 Military Hospital/University of Liverpool cohort were presence of >1 major or >2 minor criteria (see Table 1) or nurse-led selection on the basis of symptoms. CT, computed tomography. *Indicates telephone number was not available or telephone was repeatedly switched off.
Figure 2Prevalence of neurological symptoms by sex in study of severe neurologic sequelae among Ebola virus disease survivors, Sierre Leone. Cohort consisted of 24 survivors attending the 34 Military Hospital /University of Liverpool survivors clinic. Error bars indicate 95% CI. PTSD, posttraumatic stress disorders.
Demographics, diagnoses, and management and outcome of 35 Ebola virus disease case-patients in whom neurologic and psychiatric conditions were diagnosed at preliminary and specialist neurology and psychiatric clinics, Sierre Leone*
| Patient no. | Age, y/sex | Diagnoses | Management and outcome |
| 1 | 21/M | Migraine headache, psychosocial issues | MH follow-up |
| 2 | 47/M | Resolved migraine headache, left retinal detachment | Review at 1 y: no change in symptoms |
| 4 | 33/M | Migraine headache | DNA specialist clinic |
| 5 | 54/F | Psychosocial issues, undifferentiated headache | Referred to psychiatry for assessment but did not attend |
| 6 | 18/F | Undifferentiated headache | Referred return to general survivor’s clinic |
| 7 | 21/F | Tension-type headache, major depressive disorder | Local MH follow-up |
| 8 | 29/F | Undifferentiated headache | Referred return to general survivor’s clinic |
| 9 | 26/F | Migraine headache | Referred to MH for assessment but did not attend Review at 1 y: improvement in symptoms |
| 10 | 27/F | Right brachial plexus neuropathy | Physiotherapy. Review at 1 y: substantial improvement in weakness |
| 11 | 42/F | Right striatocapsular infarct, generalized anxiety disorder | Physiotherapy, MH follow-up |
| 13 | 58/F | Undifferentiated headache | Referred return to general survivor’s clinic for nonneurologic and other symptoms |
| 14 | 38/M | Possible anterior uveitis, undifferentiated headache | Ophthalmology referral |
| 15 | 49/F | Tension-type headache | Referred return to general survivor’s clinic for nonneurologic symptoms |
| 16 | 31/F | Migraine headache | Propranolol 20 mg/d; symptoms improved (unable to quantify) |
| 17 | 51/F | Undifferentiated headache, peripheral sensory neuropathy | Referred return to general survivor’s clinic for nonneurologic symptoms |
| 18 | 32/F | Tinnitus, anterior uveitis | Ophthalmology referral. MH follow-up. Review at 1 y: improvement in tinnitus, now occasional |
| 19 | 38/M | Undifferentiated headache | Local MH follow-up |
| 20 | 30/F | Resolved migraine headache | Review at 1 y: new onset headache with cluster-type features |
| 21 | 32/F | Migraine headache, right eye cataract, tinnitus | Ophthalmology referral |
| 22 | 21/F | Migraine headache, tinnitus | Propranolol 20 mg/d. Headache improved from 8/10 to 4/10. Review at 1 y: no further headache |
| 23 | 46/M | Essential tremor, undifferentiated headache | DNA specialist clinic |
| 24 | 43/F | Migraine headache | Propranolol 20 mg/d, initially 10/10 headache pain now better (not able to quantify). Review at 1 y: decreased frequency of headaches, now occasional |
| 25 | 42/M | Extensive right MCA infarct, major depressive disorder | Physiotherapy, MH follow-up. Review at 1 y: improvement in symptoms. Patient subsequently died. |
| 26 | 25/F | Ulnar nerve palsy | DNA specialist clinic |
| 27 | 25/M | Migraine headache, asymmetric lower limb muscle wasting | MH follow-up. Review at 1 y: decreased frequency of headaches, now occasional |
| 28 | 21/F | Tension-type headache | Review at 1 y: decreased frequency of headaches; now occasional. Fever/rash during pregnancy; miscarriage |
| 29 | 61/F | Migraine headache, bilateral cataract | Local MH follow-up |
| 30 | 19/F | Anterior uveitis, undifferentiated headache | Urgent referral to local ophthalmology clinic |
| 31 | 33/F | Migraine headache, generalized anxiety disorder | Propranolol 20 m/d; improved headache from 10/10 to 6/10. MH follow-up |
| 32 | 43/F | Undifferentiated headache, arthralgia | Referred to local ophthalmology clinic |
| 33 | 41/F | Migraine headache, anxiety | MH follow-up, simple analgesia. Review at 1 y: decreased frequency of headaches, now occasional |
| 34 | 25/F | Undifferentiated headache | Referred to general survivor’s clinic |
| 35 | 35/M | Migraine headache, asymmetric sensory peripheral neuropathy, major depressive disorder | MH follow-up, propranolol 20 mg/d, gabapentin 300 mg each night; diet advice and review in diabetic clinic referral. Headache improved (unable to quantify); pain in feet improved. Review at 1 y: decreased frequency of headaches, now occasional; improvement in neuropathy |
| 37 | 12/F | Severe neurocognitive impairment, postviral encephalitis | Referral to orphanage for 24-h care |
| 38 | 21/M | Undifferentiated headache, arthralgia | ND |
| *MH, mental health; MCA, middle cerebral artery; ND, no data. | |||
Demographics, clinical characteristics during acute admission, and cycle threshold of preliminary clinic group in study of severe neurologic sequelae among Ebola virus disease survivors, by those who had severe and those who had no severe neurologic conditions, Sierre Leone*
| Characteristic | No severe neurologic features, n = 21 | Severe neurologic features, n = 19 | Crude odds ratio† (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age, y, median (IQR) | 28 (23–60) | 32 (25–42) | 0.01 (0.00–0.036)/y |
| Female sex, % (95% CI) | 48 (43–54) | 68 43–87 | 2.3 (0.79–7.60) |
| Length of stay, d, median (IQR) | 18 (14–28) | 25 (13–29) | 0.02/d |
| Seizures during admission, % (95% CI) | 19 (5–42) | 21 (6–46) | 1.13 (0.18–7.23) |
| Unconscious during admission, % (95% CI) | 33 (15–57) | 63 (38–83) | 3.32 (0.79–15.4) |
| Bleeding during admission, % (95% CI) | 19 (5–42) | 5 (0.1–26) | 0.24 (0.00–2.80) |
| Cycle threshold, median (IQR) | 22.8 (22.1–24.1), n = 9 | 27.2 (22.5–30.1), n = 10 | 0.22 (0.7–1.3) for each increment |
*Severe conditions were those requiring specialist referral. †Odds ratio of patients having severe neurologic features compared with those who did not.
Figure 3Representative nonenhanced computed tomography (CT) brain scans and composite scanning laser ophthalmoscope fundus images of 2 Ebola virus disease survivors attending a joint neurologic and psychiatric clinic in Sierre Leone. A) Patient no. 37, female, age 12. CT of brain shows disproportionate parietal and temporal lobe atrophy. B) Patient no. 25, male, age 42. CT of brain shows extensive gliosis within the left middle cerebral artery territory reflects an old infarct with ex-vacuo dilatation of left lateral ventricle due to hemispheric volume loss. C) Patient no. 12, age 40. Retinal imaging shows left and right eye, with extensive bilateral peripapillary pale retinal lesions with pigmentation of larger lesions. Lesions appear to spare the fovea. Visual acuity was 20/25 (right) and 20/20 (left) (). D) Patient no. 25, male, age 42. Retinal imaging shows left and right eye, with peripapillary pale retinal lesions. Visual acuity was 20/25 in both eyes ().