Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8273278 | Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2017 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
Viral infectious vasculitis is a cause of stroke in children. Zika virus infection is often asymptomatic. Neurological complications have however been reported: Guillain-Barré, ADEM, meningoencephalitis, myelitis, microcephaly in the fetus of infected mothers. We discuss the case of a child presenting acute infection with ZIKV that was associated with a stroke. A 10-months-old boy without medical history presented after 2Â days of fever and cutaneous rash, conjunctivitis on day 5, a right hemiparesis on day 6. Brain MRI found an ischemic stroke in the left superficial MCA territory with distal occlusion of left M1 portion of the MCA. Specific real-time reverse PCR detected Zika virus in serum. There are no known cases of cerebral infarction associated with Zika infection. However, cases of cerebral infarcts associated with dengue vasculitis have rarely been described. It has been recently showed that there is a tropism of the Zika virus for endothelial cells. This could be responsible for stroke, possibly particularly in young children.
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Authors
Anne Landais, Audrey Césaire, Manuel Fernandez, Sébastien Breurec, Cécile Herrmann, Fréderique Delion, Philippe Desprez,