17º CONGRESSO BRASILEIRO DE NEUROLOGIA INFANTIL

Dados do Trabalho


Título

ADENOVIRUS ENCEPHALITIS ASSOCIATED WITH ACUTE HEPATITIS: CASE REPORT

Apresentação do caso

Male, 6 years old, admitted to the hospital due to altered mental status (Glasgow Coma Scale = 3) preceded by fever, vomiting, fatigue, hypothermia and seizures. The patient presented with refractory hypoglycemia and jaundice at physical examination. Blood tests showed altered hepatic function (AST 548UI/L, ALT 2833UI/L, total bilirubin 5,81mg/dL, INR 5,2, albumin 2,4g/dL), and serologies for viral hepatitis were negative. Acyclovir was started due to the possibility of viral encephalitis. Evaluation included electroencephalogram with signs of accentuated diffuse encephalopathy, with moderate irritative activity in the left temporal lobe; brain magnetic resonance imaging showed hyperintensity in T2/FLAIR in the periventricular and deep white matter; viral culture in the cerebrospinal fluid was positive for adenovirus. It was opted to discontinue acyclovir. He presented with improvement of lethargy and hepatic function after 5 days, but evolved with irritability and ataxia. Brain magnetic resonance imaging was repeated, showing discretely larger white matter lesions, spreading to the semioval centers and corona radiata. Supportive care was continued and the patient showed normal gait and behavior after 5 days, being released with no complementary treatment. Electroencephalogram before hospital discharge showed focal paroxysms in the left parieto-occipital region, but the patient did not have new seizures.

Discussão

The adenovirus family is an important cause of infection in children, with over 60 serotypes, causing more commonly respiratory and gastrointestinal infections, usually self-limited. Rarely, they can cause other types of infection, such as encephalitis, and in such cases can either cause mild or potentially fatal disease. Seizures are associated with worse prognosis. In the case above, the patient presented with associated acute hepatitis, compatible with the outbreak of adenovirus hepatitis of April of 2022. Thus, this is an unusual case characterized by systemic disease due to a common virus in childhood. There are no electroencephalogram specific or imaging findings. Treatment consists of supportive care.

Comentários finais

Adenovirus encephalitis is a rare disease in childhood, but can cause severe neurologic complications. It must be investigated in patients with evidence of central nervous system infection, especially susceptible groups, such as immunosuppressed individuals.

Referências (se houver)

Adenovirus Associated Central Nervous System Disease in Children| The Journal of Pediatrics, 2018
Adenovirus: Epidemiology, Global Spread of Novel Serotypes, and Advances in Treatment and Prevention |Seminars in Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 2016
Human adenovirus meningoencephalitis: a 3-years’ overview |Journal of NeuroVirology, 2019

Fonte de Fomento (se houver)

Declaração de conflito de interesses de TODOS os autores

Não há

Área

Neuroinfecções

Instituições

Hospital de Clínicas de Porto Alegre - Rio Grande do Sul - Brasil

Autores

Dayana de Lima Mariano, Layanna Bezerra Maciel Pereira , Ana Clara Bernardi Saul, Gabriel de Lellis Neto , Renata Yasmim Cardoso Sousa, Lygia Ohlweiler, Josiane Ranzan, Rudimar dos Santos Riesgo, Maria Isabel Bragatti Winckler