| Literature DB >> 34179214 |
Siddharth Ninan1, Peyton Thompson2, Timothy Gershon2, Natalie Ford3, William Mills4, Valerie Jewells5, Leigh Thorne6, Katherine Saunders6, Thomas Bouldin6, Jason R Smedberg7, Melissa B Miller6,7, Eveline Wu8, Alyssa Tilly9, Jeremy Sites10, Daniel Lercher10, Katherine Clement10, Tracie Walker10, Paul Shea10, Benny Joyner10, Rebecca Smith10.
Abstract
The novel coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2, can present with a wide range of neurological manifestations, in both adult and pediatric populations. We describe here the case of a previously healthy 8-year-old girl who presented with seizures, encephalopathy, and rapidly progressive, diffuse, and ultimately fatal cerebral edema in the setting of acute COVID-19 infection. CSF analysis, microbiological testing, and neuropathology yielded no evidence of infection or acute inflammation within the central nervous system. Acute fulminant cerebral edema (AFCE) is an often fatal pediatric clinical entity consisting of fever, encephalopathy, and new-onset seizures followed by rapid, diffuse, and medically-refractory cerebral edema. AFCE occurs as a rare complication of a variety of common pediatric infections and a CNS pathogen is identified in only a minority of cases, suggesting a para-infectious mechanism of edema. This report suggests that COVID-19 infection can precipitate AFCE, and highlights the need for high suspicion and early recognition thereof.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; cerebral edema; pediatric; seizures
Year: 2021 PMID: 34179214 PMCID: PMC8207268 DOI: 10.1177/2329048X211022532
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Child Neurol Open ISSN: 2329-048X
Initial Laboratory* and Microbiological Findings.
| Parameter | Patient’s value | Units | Reference value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Complete Blood Count | |||
| White blood cell count | 6.9 | 109/L | 4.5-13.0 |
| Hemoglobin |
| g/dL | 13.0-16.0 |
| MCV | 83.4 | fL | 78.0-98.0 |
| Platelet count | 183 | 109/L | 150-440 |
| Complete metabolic panel | |||
| Sodium | 143 | mmol/L | 135-145 |
| Potassium | 4.3 | mmol/L | 3.4-4.7 |
| Chloride | 105 | mmol/L | 98-107 |
| CO2 | 22.0 | mmol/L | 22.0-30.0 |
| BUN | 12 | mg/dL | 5-17 |
| Creatinine | 0.39 | mg/dL | 0.30-0.90 |
| Anion gap |
| mmol/L | 7-15 |
| Glucose | 128 | mg/dL | 70-179 |
| Calcium | 9.0 | mg/dL | 8.8-10.8 |
| Magnesium | 2.0 | mg/dL | 1.6-2.2 |
| Phosphorus |
| mg/dL | 4.0-5.7 |
| Albumin | 4.1 | g/dL | 3.5-5.0 |
| Total Protein | 7.9 | g/dL | 6.5-8.3 |
| Total Bilirubin | 0.2 | mg/dL | 0.0 -1.2 |
| AST |
| U/L | 10-40 |
| ALT | 37 | U/L | <50 |
| Alkaline Phosphatase | 132 | U/L | 130-560 |
| Cardiac Enzymes | |||
| Troponin I | <0.034 | ng/mL | <0.034 |
| Pro-BNP |
| pg/mL | 0.0-178.0 |
| ESR | 19.0 | mm/h | 0-20 |
| CRP |
| mg/L | <10.0 |
| LDH | 742 | U/L | 380-770 |
| Coagulation Panel | |||
| PT |
| sec | 10.2-13.1 |
| INR | 1.25 | N/A | N/A |
| APTT | 36.5 | sec | 25.9-39.5 |
| D-Dimer |
| DDU | <230 |
| Fibrinogen | 316 | mg/dL | 177-386 |
| Infectious Disease Test Results | |||
| SARS-CoV-2 PCR (nasopharyngeal) |
| N/A | Negative |
| SARS-CoV-2 PCR (CSF) | Negative | N/A | Negative |
| Blood culture | No growth | N/A | No growth |
| CSF culture | No growth | N/A | No growth |
| 4th generation HIV Ag/Ab | Negative | N/A | Negative |
| CMV PCR (serum and CSF) | Undetectable | N/A | Undetectable |
| EBV PCR (serum and CSF) | Undetectable | N/A | Undetectable |
| HHV-6 PCR (serum and CSF) | Undetectable | N/A | Undetectable |
| HSV 1/2 PCR (serum and CSF) | Undetectable | N/A | Undetectable |
| VZV PCR (serum and CSF) | Undetectable | N/A | Undetectable |
| Enterovirus PCR (serum and CSF) | Undetectable | N/A | Undetectable |
| Arbovirus panel (CSF) | Negative | N/A | Negative |
| Parvovirus B-19 PCR (serum) | Undetectable | N/A | Undetectable |
| Bartonella antibody panel (serum) | Negative | N/A | Negative |
| LCMV PCR/antibody (serum and CSF) | Negative | N/A | Negative |
| Naegleria PCR (CSF) | Undetectable | N/A | Undetectable |
| Balamuthia PCR (CSF) | Undetectable | N/A | Undetectable |
| Acanthamoeba PCR (CSF) | Undetectable | N/A | Undetectable |
| Baylisascaris procyonis Ab (serum) | Negative | N/A | Negative |
| Postmortem Microbiological Results | |||
| Aerobic culture, left lung |
| N/A | No growth |
| Aerobic culture, right lung | No growth | N/A | No growth |
| Aerobic culture, brain tissue | <1+ | N/A | No growth |
| Aerobic/anaerobic culture, spleen | No growth | N/A | No growth |
| AFB smear/culture, left lung | No growth | N/A | No growth |
| AFB smear/culture, right lung | No growth | N/A | No growth |
| AFB smear/culture, brain tissue | No growth | N/A | No growth |
| Fungal culture, left lung | 4+ | N/A | No growth |
| Fungal culture, right lung | No growth | N/A | No growth |
| Fungal culture, brain tissue | No growth | N/A | No growth |
| Respiratory pathogen panel, left lung | Negative | N/A | Negative |
| Respiratory pathogen panel, right lung | Negative | N/A | Negative |
| SARS-CoV-2 PCR (blood) | Negative | N/A | Negative |
| SARS-CoV-2 PCR (brain tissue) | Negative | N/A | Negative |
| SARS-CoV-2 PCR (left lung) | Negative | N/A | Negative |
| SARS-CoV-2 PCR (right lung) | Negative | N/A | Negative |
* Initial laboratory findings obtained while patient was in the emergency department.
1This fungal growth was likely related to the patient’s known aspiration event.
2Growth from aerobic culture of brain tissue was believed to be contamination from lung tissue at time of autopsy; growth in only 1 of 2 aerobic cultures from brain tissue.
Figure 1.Brain imaging (MRI/MRA/MRV). day #1 brain MRI (A) sagittal T1 image demonstrates downward herniation with decreased size of the suprasellar cistern, posterior fossa crowding causing brainstem compression against the clivus and developing tonsillar herniation. (B) MRV demonstrates patent jugular veins and transverse sinuses without thrombosis. The sagittal sinus and deep venous system are not visible. (C) T2 axial images reveal diffuse cortical swelling mild, global gray matter hyperintensity, and slit-like ventricles suggesting brain edema. (D) coronal MRA image demonstrates near complete or complete loss ACA, MCA, PCA and basilar flow. (E) susceptibility-weighted imaging shows exaggerated cortical veins consistent with engorgement vs thrombosis. the subsequent MRI sagittal T1 (F), day #2 demonstrates tonsillar herniation down to the level of C2. MRIs on day #1 and 2 revealed bilateral parotid cysts (G), suggesting parotitis, which has been reported in cases of COVID-19 infection.