Title: Neurologic Complications of Varicella-Zoster Virus Infection
1Neurologic Complications of Varicella-Zoster
Virus Infection
- John W. Gnann, Jr. MD
- University of Alabama at Birmingham
- Birmingham, AL USA
- IHMF Paris 2003
2(No Transcript)
3- Varicella in an
- Immunocompetent
- Adult
4Varicella in the Immunocompetent Host
- Serious neurologic complications occur in lt1 of
cases - Aseptic meningitis
- Cerebellar ataxia
- Transverse myelitis
- Encephalitis
- Guillain-Barré syndrome
- Arterial ischemic strokes
- Optic neuritis
5Varicella with Cerebellar Ataxia - 1
- Incidence - 1/4000 cases of varicella
- Presentation
- Ataxia usually simultaneous with rash (can
precede the rash) - Ataxia accompanied by HA, vomiting, lethargy
- 25 have fever, nuchal rigidity, nystagmus
- Seizures are rare
- Diagnosis
- Clinical diagnosis sufficient in typical cases
- CSF usually normal. Pleocytosis (lt100 WBC) in
25 - EEG - diffuse slow wave activity (20)
- MRI - rarely see focal cerebellar or brain stem
lesions
6Varicella with Cerebellar Ataxia - 2
- Pathogenesis
- Direct viral involvement of cerebellum?
- Positive CSF VZV PCR and antibody
- Parainfectious immune-mediated process?
- Prognosis
- Self-limited disease, most patients improve in
1-3 weeks - Virtually all recover without sequelae
- Therapy
- Role of antiviral drugs has not been studied, but
administration is probably appropriate
7Varicella Encephalitis - 1
- Incidence
- 1-2/10,000 cases of varicella
- Incidence highest in adults and infants
- Presentation
- Symptoms usually appear about one week after rash
(though may be earlier or later). Acute or
gradual onset. - Fever, HA, vomiting, altered mental status
- Focal neurologic findings -- hyper/hypo-reflexia,
hemiparesis, sensory changes - Seizures 29-52 of cases
8Varicella Encephalitis - 2
- Diagnosis
- Lumbar puncture
- Increased opening pressure, pleocytosis (lt100
WBC), elevated protein, normal glucose - EEG
- Slow wave activity consistent with diffuse
encephalitis - CT scan
- Cerebral edema, areas of low attenuation
consistent with demyelination. - MRI scan
- Limited data
9Varicella Encephalitis - 3
- Pathogenesis
- Role of active viral replication in CNS?
- Pathologic findings more consistent with
post-infectious demyelinating process. Inclusion
bodies rarely seen. - Prognosis
- Mortality about 5-10 (higher mortality in older
literature probably due to Reyes syndrome) - 10-20 of survivors will have neurologic sequelae
- Therapy
- IV acyclovir recommended, but no prospective data
10Pediatric Arterial Ischemic Stroke Syndromes
- Immunocompetent children (median age 5 yr)
present with acute hemiplegia - Median interval between varicella and onset of
neurologic deficits 2 months - CT/MRI unilateral infarcts of deep structures
(e.g., basal ganglia, internal capsule) - Angiography vasculopathy of the branches of the
middle cerebral artery - Outcome frequently good (better than adults)
- Ref Moriuchi et al. Pediatr Infect Dis J
19648, 2000
11Does Varicella Cause Pediatric Strokes?
- Incidence of childhood ischemic strokes
3.3/100,000 children/yr - In a prospective study, 31 (22/70) children with
strokes had varicella within prior 12 mo,
compared with 9 of controls - Children with strokes and recent varicella had
higher rates of basal ganglia infarction,
abnormal CNS vascular imaging, and recurrent
ischemic attacks. - Conclusion Post-varicella angiopathy may
account for 1/3 of all childhood strokes - Ref Askalan et al Stroke 321257,2001 deVerber
et al Sem Ped Neurol 7309, 2000
12Fatal VZV CNS vasculopathy in a 4 year old girl
occlusion of left MCA
Please see figure in Berger et al, Ped Infect Dis
J 19653, 2000
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14Neurologic Complications of Herpes Zoster
- Postherpetic neuralgia pathology in the central
and peripheral nervous system - Cranial nerve syndromes (e.g., Ramsay-Hunt,
Bells palsy) - Motor neuropathies
- Retinal necrosis
- Large-vessel encephalitis (granulomatous
arteritis) - - Delayed contralateral hemiplegia
- Chronic small-vessel encephalitis
(immuno-compromised host) - - Multifocal leukoencephalopathy
15Ramsay-Hunt Syndrome Herpes Zoster of the 7th
Cranial Nerve
Please see figure in Kleinschmidt-DeMasters et
al, Arch Path Lab Med 125770, 2001
16HZO Followed by Contralateral Hemiparesis
Please see figure in Nogueira and Sheen, NEJM
3461127, 2002
17Herpes Zoster Ophthalmicus with Delayed
Contralateral Hemiparesis - 1
- Reported in normal and immunocompromised patients
- Usual onset 7 wk (up to 6 mo) after ophthalmic
zoster - Presents as a stroke -- HA, hemiplegia
(contra-lateral to the zoster) - Mortality 20-25 -- high probability of
neurologic sequelae
18Herpes Zoster Ophthalmicus with Delayed
Contralateral Hemiparesis - 2
- Diagnosis
- CT or MRI shows infarction
- CSF shows mononuclear cell pleocytosis (WBC lt100)
- Angiography shows diagnostic narrowing of middle
or anterior cerebral arteries - Pathology -- giant cell arteritis, vessel
thrombosis, brain infarction PCR positive for
VZV - Therapy -- IV acyclovir plus steroids, but
benefit uncertain irreversible ischemic changes
19Hemiparesis Following Herpes Zoster
- Please see figure in Gilden et al, NEJM 342635,
2000
20Zoster Sine Herpete
- Radicular neuropathic pain in a dermatomal
distribution without cutaneous eruption - Pathogenesis VZV reactivation in ganglion, but
transaxonal spread of virus to skin halted by
host immune response? - Prevalence unknown
- Difficult to diagnose -- a few cases have been
linked to VZV by 4-fold antibody rises or
positive CSF PCR for VZV DNA - Anecdotal reports of clinical response to
antiviral therapy
21Myelitis Complicating Herpes Zoster
- Please see figure in Kleinschmidt-DeMasters et
al, Arch Path Lab Med 125770, 2001
22Chronic VZV Encephalitis in AIDS
- Usually occurs months after herpes zoster
- 30 - 40 have no history of recent VZV skin
disease - Subacute onset of HA, hemiplegia, mental status
changes, seizures - MRI - infarcts of cortical and subcortical gray
and white matter (multifocal leukoencephalopathy) - Pathology - small vessel vasculitis. CSF PCR
for VZV DNA - Therapy - high dose IV acyclovir. Efficacy
undefined - Prognosis - Poor. Progressive neurologic
disease, death
23Chronic VZV Encephalitis in AIDS
- Please see figure in Gilden et al, NEJM 342635,
2000