The clinical features among the affected patients were nearly identical, consisting of relatively mild CNS manifestations and complete recovery within 1 month.
Acute encephalopathy is the most serious complication of pediatric viral infections, such as influenza and exanthem subitum. It occurs worldwide, but is most prevalent in East Asia, and every year several hundreds of Japanese children are affected by influenza‐associated encephalopathy. Mortality has recently declined, but is still high. Many survivors are left with motor and intellectual disabilities, and some with epilepsy. This article reviews various syndromes of acute encephalopathy by classifying them into three major categories. The first group caused by metabolic derangement consists of various inherited metabolic disorders and the classical Reye syndrome. Salicylate is a risk factor of the latter condition. The second group, characterized by a systemic cytokine storm and vasogenic brain edema, includes Reye‐like syndrome, hemorrhagic shock and encephalopathy syndrome, and acute necrotizing encephalopathy. Non‐steroidal anti‐inflammatory drugs, such as diclofenac sodium and mephenamic acid, may aggravate these syndromes. Severe cases are complicated by multiple organ failure and disseminated intravascular coagulation. Mortality is high, although methylprednisolone pulse therapy may be beneficial in some cases. The third group, characterized by localized edema of the cerebral cortex, has recently been termed acute encephalopathy with febrile convulsive status epilepticus, and includes hemiconvulsion‐hemiplegia syndrome and acute infantile encephalopathy predominantly affecting the frontal lobes. Theophylline is a risk factor of these syndromes. The pathogenesis is yet to be clarified, but an increasing body of evidence points to excitotoxicity and delayed neuronal death.
SummaryKawasaki disease (KD) is an acute illness of early childhood characterized by prolonged fever, diffuse mucosal inflammation, indurative oedema of the hands and feet, a polymorphous skin rash and nonsuppurative lymphadenopathy. The histopathological findings in KD comprise panvasculitis with endothelial necrosis, and the infiltration of mononuclear cells into small and medium-sized blood vessels. The levels of many proinflammatory cytokines, chemokines and adhesion molecules can be elevated in sera from children with KD at the acute stage. Although many immunological studies on KD involving peripheral blood have been reported, the data obtained remain controversial. This review focuses on the immune response of peripheral blood lymphocytes and monocytes/macrophages during acute KD.
The cardinal symptom of acute encephalopathy is impairment of consciousness of acute onset during the course of an infectious disease, with duration and severity meeting defined criteria. Acute encephalopathy consists of multiple syndromes such as acute necrotizing encephalopathy, acute encephalopathy with biphasic seizures and late reduced diffusion and clinically mild encephalitis/ encephalopathy with reversible splenial lesion. Among these syndromes, there are both similarities and differences. In 2016, the Japanese Society of Child Neurology published 'Guidelines for the Diagnosis and Treatment of Acute Encephalopathy in Childhood', which made recommendations and comments on the general aspects of acute encephalopathy in the first half, and on individual syndromes in the latter half. Since the guidelines were written in Japanese, this review article describes extracts from the recommendations and comments in English, in order to introduce the essence of the guidelines to international clinicians and researchers.
Eleven children with acute encephalopathy associated with an influenza virus infection were treated during the 1997-1998 influenza season. Reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) assay was used to detect the viral genome in peripheral blood and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples. The results were compared with those of control influenza patients without neurological complications. Viral RNA was detected only in the peripheral blood mononuclear cells of one patient with influenza-virus-associated encephalopathy (1 of 9; 11%) and in the CSF of another patient (1 of 11;9%). RT-PCR was negative in the blood of all the controls, but the percentage of RT-PCR-positive samples in the two groups was not significantly different. Cytokines and soluble cytokine receptors in plasma and CSF were then quantified using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. The CSF concentrations of soluble tumor necrosis factor receptor-1 were elevated in two patients and interleukin-6 (IL-6) was elevated in one patient with influenza-virus-associated encephalopathy. On the other hand, the plasma concentrations of IL-6 were elevated in four of nine patients. The number of encephalopathy patients who had elevated plasma concentrations of IL-6 100 pg/ml was significantly higher than that of controls (P= .01). In conclusion, the infrequent detection of the viral genome in the CSF and blood showed that direct invasion of the virus into the central nervous system was an uncommon event. Proinflammatory cytokines and soluble cytokine receptors may mediate the disease. The high plasma concentration of IL-6 could be an indicator of the progression to encephalopathy.
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