| Literature DB >> 35062704 |
Tina Y Poussaint1, Kerri L LaRovere2, Jane W Newburger3,4, Janet Chou4,5, Lise E Nigrovic4,6, Tanya Novak7, Adrienne G Randolph4,7.
Abstract
A 12-year-old male was presented to the hospital with acute encephalopathy, headache, vomiting, diarrhea, and elevated troponin after recent COVID-19 vaccination. Two days prior to admission and before symptom onset, he received the second dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine. Symptoms developed within 24 h with worsening neurologic symptoms, necessitating admission to the pediatric intensive care unit. Brain magnetic resonance imaging within 16 h of admission revealed a cytotoxic splenial lesion of the corpus callosum (CLOCC). Nineteen days prior to admission, he developed erythema migrans, and completed an amoxicillin treatment course for clinical Lyme disease. However, Lyme antibody titers were negative on admission and nine days later, making active Lyme disease an unlikely explanation for his presentation to hospital. An extensive workup for other etiologies on cerebrospinal fluid and blood samples was negative, including infectious and autoimmune causes and known immune deficiencies. Three weeks after hospital discharge, all of his symptoms had dissipated, and he had a normal neurologic exam. Our report highlights a potential role of mRNA vaccine-induced immunity leading to MIS-C-like symptoms with cardiac involvement and a CLOCC in a recently vaccinated child and the complexity of establishing a causal association with vaccination. The child recovered without receipt of immune modulatory treatment.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19 mRNA vaccine; cytotoxic lesion of the corpus callosum; multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children; severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2
Year: 2021 PMID: 35062704 PMCID: PMC8781649 DOI: 10.3390/vaccines10010043
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccines (Basel) ISSN: 2076-393X
Figure 1Timeline of development of MIS-C-like symptoms after Lyme disease and COVID-19 mRNA vaccination. Abbreviations: EM, erythema migrans; PICU, pediatric intensive care unit; PTA, prior to admission.
Figure 2Cytotoxic lesion of the corpus callosum. Axial T2 image (A) shows focus of T2 prolongation representing cytotoxic edema in the splenium of corpus callosum (arrow) with reduced diffusivity on trace diffusion image (B) (arrow) and apparent diffusion coefficient map (C).
Diagnostic studies and results during hospital admission.
| Laboratory Studies | Source | Result |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| SARS-CoV2 PCR | NP swab | Negative |
| Anti-SARS-CoV2 nucleocapsid antibodies | Blood | Negative |
| Culture and gram stain | CSF | Negative |
| Adenovirus PCR | Blood, NP swab | Negative |
| Enterovirus PCR | Blood, CSF | Negative |
| Herpes Simplex Virus type 1 and type 2 | CSF | Negative |
| Varicella Zoster Virus PCR | CSF | Negative |
| Epstein Barr Virus PCR | Blood | Negative |
| Coxsackie A9 antibodies | Blood | Negative |
| Ehrlichia and Anaplasma PCR | Blood | Negative |
| Rickettsia rickettsia serologies, IgM, IgG | Blood | Negative |
| Eastern Equine Encephalitis IgM | Blood | Negative |
| West Nile Virus IgM | Blood | Negative |
| Pneumococcus IgG | Blood | Negative |
| Tetanus IgG | Blood | Negative |
| RVP (Adenovirus PCR, hMPV PCR, Rhinovirus PCR, Influenza A and B PCR, RSV PCR) | NP swab | Negative |
| Legionella antigen | Urine | Negative |
| Lyme antibody index | CSF | Negative |
| Neurologic | ||
| Anti-MOG antibodies | Blood, CSF | Negative |
| Autoimmune encephalitis panel | Blood, CSF | Negative |
| CNS demyelinating disease panel # | Blood | Negative |
|
| ||
| Viral Respiratory Panel (Myocarditis) | NP Swab | Negative |
| Electrocardiogram (ECG) | N/A | Widespread repolarization abnormalities, with nonspecific ST-T wave changes |
| Echocardiogram | N/A | Normal systolic and diastolic ventricular function, normal coronary dimensions, no significant valvar dysfunction, and no pericardial effusion |
| Cardiac MRI | N/A | No evidence of active myocarditis or late gadolinium enhancement |
|
| ||
| Soluble CD25, units/mL | Blood | 690 (137–838) |
| Serum inflammatory markers ^,* | ||
| D-dimer, mcg/mL FEU | Blood | 0.43 |
| Erythrocyte sedimentation rate, mm/h | Blood | 5 |
| Platelet count, K cells/μL | Blood | 313 |
|
| ||
| White blood, cells/mm3 | CSF | 2 with 7% neutrophils, 35% lymphocytes, 58% macrophages |
| Red blood cells | CSF | 0 |
| Protein, mg/dL | CSF | 14.9 |
| Glucose, mg/dL | CSF | 85 |
| Opening pressure, cmH2O | CSF | 21 |
| Prothrombin time, seconds | Blood | 15.7 (12.1–14.6) |
| AST, unit/L | Blood | 24 (2–40) |
| ALT, unit/L | Blood | 35 (3–30) |
Abbreviations: SARS-CoV-2, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2; NP, nasopharyngeal; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; RVP, respiratory viral panel; hMPV, human metapneumovirus; RSV, respiratory syncytial virus; MOG, myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein; N/A, not applicable. # Includes antibodies to NMO/AQP4 (Neuromyelitis Optica/aquaporin-4) and MOG, sent 3 weeks after hospital discharge. * Maximum values during hospital admission. ^ Serum levels of procalcitonin, ferritin, lactate dehydrogenase, fibrinogen and IL6 and CSF IL-6 and IL-10 were not measured.