| Literature DB >> 31395054 |
Luan-Yin Chang1, Hsiang-Yuan Lin2, Susan Shur-Fen Gau2, Chin-Yu Lu3, Shao-Hsuan Hsia4, Yhu-Chering Huang4, Li-Min Huang3, Tzou-Yien Lin4.
Abstract
During recent 20 years, enterovirus A71 (EV-A71) has emerged as a major concern among pediatric infectious diseases, particularly in the Asia-Pacific region. The clinical manifestations of EV-A71 include uncomplicated hand, foot, and mouth disease, herpanina or febrile illness and central nervous system (CNS) involvement such as aseptic meningitis, myoclonic jerk, polio-like syndrome, encephalitis, encephalomyelitis and cardiopulmonary failure due to severe rhombencephalitis. In follow-up studies of patients with EV-A 71 CNS infection, some still have hypoventilation and need tracheostomy with ventilator support, some have dysphagia and need nasogastric tube or gastrostomy feeding, some have limb weakness/astrophy, cerebellar dysfunction, neurodevelopmental delay, lower cognition, or attention deficiency hyperactivity disorder. Long term sequelae may be related to greater severity of CNS involvement or neuron damage, hypoxia and younger age of onset.Entities:
Keywords: Age of onset; Attention deficiency hyperactivity disorder; Cognition; Encephalitis; Enterovirus A71; Polio-like syndrome; Rhombencephalitis; Sequelae; Tracheostomy
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31395054 PMCID: PMC6688366 DOI: 10.1186/s12929-019-0552-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Sci ISSN: 1021-7770 Impact factor: 8.410
Clinical manifestations of EV-A71 infection at different stages
| Stage | Diagnosis | Manifestations |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | HFMD, herpangina, fever | Fever, oral ulceration, vesicular rash or small erythematous maculopapular rash on the hands, the feet, the knees, or the buttocks |
| 2 | CNS involvement including aseptic meningitis, myoclonic jerk, encephalitis, polio-like syndrome, encephalomyelitis | Myoclonic jerk, limb weakness, lethargy, headache, vomiting, upward gaze, nystagmus, wandering eyes, seizure |
| 3 | Autonomic nervous system dysregulation and/or cardiopulmonary failure after CNS involvement | Tachycardia, hyperthermia, profuse sweating, transient hypertension, tachypnea, hypoxia, shock, |
| 4 | Convalescence | Some with complete recovery but some with long-term sequelae shown in Table |
HFMD hand, foot, and mouth disease, CNS central nervous system
Long-term sequelae of severe EV-A 71 infections
| Sequelae | Possible causes |
|---|---|
| Dysphagia with nasogastric tube or gastrostomy feeding | Neuronal damage of the brainstem |
| Central hypoventilation with tracheostomy and ventilator support as Fig. | Neuronal damage of the brainstem |
| Limb weakness/atrophy as Fig. | Motor neuron damage |
| Seizure | Neuronal damage or hypoxia |
| Neurodevelopmental delay | Neuronal damage, younger age of onset or hypoxia |
| Lower cognition | Neuronal damage, younger age of onset or hypoxia |
| Behavioral problems, such as ADHD or oppositional symptoms | Cause to be determined |
ADHD attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder
Fig. 1A child who had tracheostomy with ventilator support because he had central hypoventilation
Fig. 2High-intensity lesions in the tegmentum of the brain stem (black arrow) and high-intensity lesions in the cervical spinal cord (gray arrow) on the T2-weighted image of MRI in a case with the sequelae of central hypoventilation and right upper limb weakness and atrophy
Fig. 3A boy who had left shoulder subluxation and left arm atrophy (arrow) due to polio-like syndrome