| Literature DB >> 35685741 |
Michelle N Stram1,2, Alan C Seifert3, Etty Cortes4,5, Alara Akyatan6, Emma Woodoff-Leith4,5, Valeriy Borukhov4,5, Amber Tetlow4,5, Dimath Alyemni1,2, Michael Greenberg1,2, Avneesh Gupta1,2, Amanda Krausert4, Lauren Mecca1,2, Sophia Rodriguez7, Jay Stahl-Herz1,2, Miguel A Guzman8, Bradley Delman3, John F Crary4,5, Kristen Dams-O'Connor9,10, Rebecca D Folkerth1,2.
Abstract
Two years into the COVID-19 pandemic, there are few published accounts of postmortem SARS-CoV-2 pathology in children. We report 8 such cases (4 infants aged 7-36 weeks, 4 children aged 5-15 years). Four underwent ex vivo magnetic resonance neuroimaging, to assist in identification of subtle lesions related to vascular compromise. All infants were found unresponsive (3 in unsafe sleeping conditions); all but 1 had recent rhinitis and/or influenza-like illness (ILI) in the family; 1 had history of sickle cell disease. Ex vivo neuroimaging in 1 case revealed white matter (WM) signal hyperintensity and diffuse exaggeration of perivascular spaces, corresponding microscopically to WM mineralization. Neurohistology in the remaining 3 infants variably encompassed WM gliosis and mineralization; brainstem gliosis; perivascular vacuolization; perivascular lymphocytes and brainstem microglia. One had ectopic hippocampal neurons (with pathogenic variant in DEPDC5). Among the children, 3 had underlying conditions (e.g., obesity, metabolic disease, autism) and all presented with ILI. Three had laboratory testing suggesting multisystem inflammatory syndrome (MIS-C). Two were hospitalized for critical care including mechanical ventilation and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO); one (co-infected with adenovirus) developed right carotid stroke ipsilateral to the ECMO cannula and the other required surgery for an ingested foreign body. Autopsy findings included: acute lung injury in 3 (1 with microthrombi); and one each with diabetic ketoacidosis and cardiac hypertrophy; coronary and cerebral arteritis and aortitis, resembling Kawasaki disease; and neuronal storage and enlarged fatty liver. All 4 children had subtle meningoencephalitis, focally involving the brainstem. On ex vivo neuroimaging, 1 had focal pontine susceptibility with corresponding perivascular inflammation/expanded perivascular spaces on histopathology. Results suggest SARS-CoV-2 in infants may present as sudden unexpected infant death, while in older children, signs and symptoms point to severe disease. Underlying conditions may predispose to fatal outcomes. As in adults, the neuropathologic changes may be subtle, with vascular changes such as perivascular vacuolization and gliosis alongside sparse perivascular lymphocytes. Detection of subtle vascular pathology is enhanced by ex vivo neuroimaging. Additional analysis of the peripheral/autonomic nervous system and investigation of co-infection in children with COVID-19 is necessary to understand risk for cardiovascular collapse/sudden death.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; MIS-C; encephalitis; microglial nodules; neuroimaging; neuropathology; sudden unexpected death in childhood; sudden unexpected infant death
Year: 2022 PMID: 35685741 PMCID: PMC9170881 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2022.894565
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.086
Published reports of pediatric SARS-CoV-2 autopsy findings.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Craver et al. ( | 17 y | Previously healthy | 2 d history of headache, dizziness, nausea, vomiting; cardiac arrest | Eosinophilic (hypersensitivity) myocarditis | N/A |
| Imam et al. ( | 10 mo | Cholestatic liver disease | Liver transplant, 8 d PTD, with development of shortness of breath and fever | Early stage DAD with microthrombi in lung (postmortem biopsy only) | N/A |
| Imam et al. ( | 5 mo | Biliary cirrhosis | Liver transplant, 4 d PTD, with development of progressive respiratory deterioration | Early stage DAD with microthrombi in lung (postmortem biopsy only) | N/A |
| Menger et al. ( | 4 y | BMI 27.1 | Respiratory distress, MIS-C; acute DAD on lung bx at 7 d; progression over 10 d | Necrotizing | N/A |
| Mulale et al. ( | 3 mo | Coinfection with | Fever and respiratory distress; progression over 5 d | DAD; microthrombi in lungs and myocardium; disseminated tuberculosis | N/A |
| Duarte-Neto et al. ( | 15 y | BMI 27.1; metastatic adrenal carcinoma | Hospital-acquired COVID-19 fever and cough, with supervening bacterial pneumonia and systemic thrombosis; progression over 5 d | “Foci” of DAD and bacterial pneumonia with thrombi; hepatic centrilobular necrosis and thrombi with infarcts; ATN; myonecrosis (postmortem needle biopsy only) | Reactive microglia; neuronal ischemia (postmortem needle biopsy only) |
| Duarte-Neto et al. ( | 7 mo | 33 wk preterm; trisomy 18; congenital heart disease; neonatal cholestatic hepatitis; BMI 11.2 | Respiratory distress, pneumonia, and multiorgan failure; progression over 12 d | DAD; hepatic cholestasis and centrilobular necrosis; ATN; myonecrosis | Reactive microglia; neuronal ischemia (postmortem needle biopsy only) |
| Duarte-Neto et al. ( | 11 y | BMI 22.6; ill relative | Fever, odynophagia, myalgia, abdominal pain, cardiac dysfunction, and MIS-C; progression over 8 d | Foci of pulmonary hemorrhage; microthrombi in lungs and kidney; hepatic centrilobular necrosis; ATN; peri-, myo-, endocarditis; myonecrosis (postmortem needle biopsy only) | Reactive microglia; neuronal ischemia (postmortem needle biopsy only) |
| Duarte-Neto et al. ( | 8 y | BMI 23.6; asthma; sickle cell trait | Fever, abdominal pain prompting laparotomy, intraoperative shock; MIS-C; progression over 10 d | Foci of DAD; microthrombi in lungs, kidney, and colon; hepatic steatosis; foci of myocarditis and diffuse band necrosis; ATN and hyaline casts; colitis, appendicitis, and peritonitis (surgical specimen); focal myositis (postmortem needle biopsy only) | Reactive microglia; neuronal ischemia; fibrin thrombi (postmortem needle |
| Duarte-Neto et al. ( | 8 y | BMI 21.24 | Fever, odynophagia, headache; progression over 5 d to vomiting and status epilepticus; MIS-C; secondary | Foci of pulmonary hemorrhage with thrombi; ATN with granular casts; myocardial band necrosis; myonecrosis (postmortem needle biopsy only) | Reactive microglia; neuronal ischemia; Alzheimer type II glia (postmortem needle |
| Poisson et al. ( | 8 y | Previously healthy | Fever, cough, headache, followed 2 wk later by unilateral weakness; brain biopsies showing necrosis and inflammation at hospital day 4 and weeks later; progression over 93 d | N/A | Right MCA infarct, with |
| Ninan et al. ( | 8 y | Previously healthy | 1 d history of fever, lethargy, myalgias, anorexia, seizure-like activity; group A streptococcal pharyngitis and COVID-19; progression to diffuse cerebral edema, pulseless ventricular tachycardia, and brain death over 2 d | Chronic lymphocytic thyroiditis; | Diffuse edema with transtentorial herniation, rare acute ischemic neuronal necrosis, and a small number of chronic inflammatory cells in leptomeninges and around few intraparenchymal vessels |
ATN, acute renal tubular necrosis; BMI, body mass index (kg/m.
Clinical characteristics, in vivo CT and ex vivo MR neuroimaging, and autopsy findings in this cohort.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Term C-section delivery for maternal diabetes | Recent rhinitis; SUID in unsafe sleep environment with positional asphyxia | Postmortem swab also + for rhino/enterovirus nucleic acid | Microscopic multifocal WM mineralization ( | |
| 2 | ILI in parents and other family in past weeks | SUID in unsafe sleep environment | Likely pathogenic variant in | N/A | Microscopic WM mineralization and gliosis, ectopic neurons in hippocampus |
| 3 | Sickle cell disease (homozygous HgbS); ILI in parents in past weeks | SUID | Interstitial pneumonitis with microthrombi | N/A | Microscopic WM and brainstem gliosis, acute neuronal ischemia |
| 4 | Treated for presumed congenital syphilis (mother incompletely treated) | SUID in unsafe sleep environment | No systemic cause of death, besides NP findings | N/A | Microscopic multifocal perivascular vacuolization and gliosis and sparse brainstem inflammation ( |
| 5 | Speech delay | Fever, cough, nasal congestion, abdominal pain, diarrhea; MIS-C; co-infection with adenovirus; treatment with vent and ECMO in hospital for 11 d | DAD; hypersensitivity myocarditis; coronary arteritis and aortitis ( | R MCA and ACA infarct (ipsilateral to ECMO); microscopic L MCA arteritis, perivascular lymphocytes in non-infarcted parenchyma, necrosis and inflammation in autonomic ganglia, peripheral nerve, skeletal muscle ( | |
| 6 | BMI 29; asthma | Fever; MIS-C; collapse and death in ED after few hours survival | DAD; cardiac hypertrophy | Microscopic early non-occlusive thrombus in leptomeningeal venule, sparse microglial nodules in medulla ( | |
| 7 | Metabolic (enzyme deficiency) disorder; pica | Fever; MIS-C; vomiting, surgery for ingested foreign body; treatment with vent and ECMO in hospital for 4 d | DAD; peritonitis; conjunctivitis | Microscopic gliosis and neuronal loss in thalamus, perivascular lymphocytes, edema, microglial nodules in pons ( | |
| 8 | BMI 45.1; autism | Fever, ataxia; collapse and death in ED shortly after arrival | Diabetic ketoacidosis; possible DAD (resuscitation changes); cardiac hypertrophy | Microscopic periventricular and perivascular mineralization in WM; sparse lymphocytes in brain and meninges, microglial aggregates ( |
Cases 1–4 were infants aged 7 weeks to 4 months; Cases 5–8 were school-age children aged 5–15 years. ACA, anterior cerebral artery; BMI, body mass index (kg/m.
Figure 1Ex vivo MRI and neuropathology in infants (Cases 1–4). (A,B) Sagittal (A) and coronal (B) multi-echo gradient-echo MRI with diffuse exaggeration of perivascular spaces, and broad areas of white matter signal hyperintensity [green arrow in right frontal lobe, per radiological orientation convention (patient's right on the left of the screen) (B)] (Case 1). (C) Coronal section of right frontal lobe showing prominent white matter vasculature (Case 1). (D) Multifocal perivascular mineralization in frontal white matter, as well as residual immature cells (arrow) (H&E, 200x) (Case 1). (E) Multifocal perivascular vacuolization (arrows) and gliosis in gray matter (H&E, 200x) (Case 4). (F) Sparse parenchymal inflammation in brainstem (H&E, 100x) (Case 4).
Figure 2In vivo CT imaging and macroscopic neuropathology in Case 5. (A,B) Axial non-contrast CT images, displayed in radiological orientation convention. (A) Broad area of hypodensity throughout entire right MCA and ACA distributions (yellow arrows) at level of mid-basal ganglia, reflecting cytotoxic edema in a broad area of infarction; areas of even lower density in caudate head and anterior lenticular nucleus, suggesting older or more established infarcts; minimal midline shift despite infarct volume. (B) Right MCA and ACA infarct at level of upper centrum semiovale, extending more superiorly to the vertex (yellow arrows); additional parenchymal hypodensity on left side, with increased sulcal density (green hatched arrows) reflecting diffuse subarachnoid hemorrhage. (C) Dorsal view of brain, with acute right carotid territory infarct (arrows), as well as subarachnoid hemorrhage over left hemisphere. (D) Coronal section at level of basal ganglia, showing infarct (R = right, dotted lines), and hypoperfusion of left watershed zone with reperfusion hemorrhage.
Figure 3Microscopic neuropathology in Case 5. (A) Left MCA with arteritis, characterized by endotheliitis (long arrow) and individually necrotic vascular smooth muscle cells (short arrows) (H&E, 200x). (B) Coronary arteritis, with full-thickness mural inflammation (arrow) (H&E, 200x). (C) Aortitis, with mural inflammation (arrow) (H&E, 100x). (D) Myenteric ganglionitis, with necrotic neuron (arrow) (H&E, 400x); (E) Sympathetic ganglionitis, with rare fibrinoid vessel (arrow) (H&E, 200x); (F) Celiac nerve with inflammation and endothelial prominence (arrow) (H&E, 100x).
Figure 4Ex vivo MRI and autopsy neuropathology in Case 6. (A) Ex-vivo axial T parametric map derived from multi-echo gradient-echo MRI, showing a linear region of susceptibility-induced T shortening in the medulla. (B) Corresponding axial section of the medulla, with same prominent parenchymal vein (arrow). (C) Leptomeningeal venule containing fibrin and inflammatory cells (early non-occlusive thrombus) (arrow) (H&E, 400x). (D) Medulla with microglial nodule (arrow) (H&E, 200x). (E) Cervical spinal lateral funiculus microglial nodule (H&E, 400x; inset, CD68 immunostain, 400x).
Figure 5Ex vivo MRI and autopsy neuropathology in Case 6. Ex vivo MRI findings of hyperintensity on multi-echo gradient-echo (ME-GRE), hypointensity on FLAIR and SWI, T1 and T shortening, and high proton density (PD) and susceptibility (χ) in the right occipital lobe, consistent with a developmental venous anomaly, histologically confirmed, attesting to our ability to distinguish COVID-19-related findings from other pathologic, incidental findings in ex vivo MRI.
Figure 6Ex vivo MRI and autopsy neuropathology in Case 7. (Top) Three-plane multi-echo gradient-echo MR images, displayed in radiological orientation convention, showing the location of the imaging-identified finding in the pons. (Middle) The appearance of the finding of interest on multiple image contrasts and parametric maps, displayed in radiological orientation convention maps. (Bottom) Gross photograph of pons with corresponding blood vessel; Luxol fast blue H&E (LHE) histology of same vessel, which at higher magnification has perivascular rarefaction, proteinaceous material and lymphocytes (ocular magnificaitons 2 ×, 10 ×, and 60 ×, respectively).
Figure 7Ex vivo MRI and autopsy neuropathology in Case 8. (A) Ex-vivo coronal T parametric map derived from multi-echo gradient-echo MRI at the cingulum, displayed in radiological orientation convention, showing a focal periventricular region of susceptibility-induced T shortening (green arrow). (B) Thickened periventricular vessel with mineralization, atypical for child of this age (H&E, 200x). (C) Internal capsule with perivascular lymphocytes (arrow) (H&E, 100x). (D) Putamen (600x), and (E) subcortical white matter (400x) with microglial nodules (arrows) (H&E). (F) Pons, caudal, with perivascular and parenchymal mononuclear inflammation (H&E 100x).