Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8740662 | Journal of Infection and Chemotherapy | 2018 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
Severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome (SFTS) is a tick-borne infectious disease caused by the SFTS virus (SFTSV). Clinical symptoms of SFTS often involve encephalopathy and other central neurological symptoms, particularly in seriously ill patients; however, pathogenesis of encephalopathy by SFTSV is largely unknown. Herein, we present case reports of three patients with SFTS, complicated by encephalopathy, admitted to Tokushima University hospital: one patient was a 63-year-old man, while the other two were 83- and 86-year-old women. All of them developed disturbance of consciousness around the 7th day post onset of fever. After methylprednisolone pulse therapy of 500Â mg/day, all of them recovered without any neurological sequelae. SFTSV genome was not detected in the cerebrospinal fluid of 2 out of the 3 patients that were available for examination. In these patients, disturbance of consciousness seemed to be an indirect effect of the cytokine storm triggered by SFTSV infection. We propose that short-term glucocorticoid therapy might be beneficial in the treatment of encephalopathy during early phase of SFTSV infection.
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Immunology and Microbiology
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology
Authors
Shingen Nakamura, Momoyo Azuma, Tomoko Maruhashi, Kimiko Sogabe, Ryohei Sumitani, Munenori Uemura, Masami Iwasa, Shiro Fujii, Hirokazu Miki, Kumiko Kagawa, Takashi Hiraga, Noriyasu Kondo, Hiromi Fujita, Fumihiko Mahara, Masahiro Abe,