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Jama Neurology: Neurologic Complications Associated With the Zika Virus in Brazilian Adults

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  • Jama Neurology: Neurologic Complications Associated With the Zika Virus in Brazilian Adults

    Neurologic Complications Associated With the Zika Virus in Brazilian Adults

    Ivan Rocha Ferreira da Silva, MD, PhD1,2; Jennifer A. Frontera, MD3; Ana Maria Bispo de Filippis, PhD4; et al Osvaldo Jose Moreira do Nascimento, MD, PhD1; for the RIO-GBS-ZIKV Research Group
    Author Affiliations Article Information
    JAMA Neurol. Published online August 14, 2017. doi:10.1001/jamaneurol.2017.1703
    Key Points

    Question What is the spectrum of neurologic manifestations in adults with Zika virus infection?
    Findings This cohort study evaluated adult patients with new-onset parainfectious or neuroinflammatory disease for the presence of acute Zika virus infection in both serum and cerebrospinal fluid samples using molecular and serological testing. An increase in the incidence of Guillain-Barr? syndrome and encephalitis was observed compared with the period before the outbreak of the Zika virus.
    Meaning The Zika virus may be associated with a rapid increase in the incidence of life-threatening neurologic syndromes; serologic and molecular testing using blood and cerebrospinal fluid samples can serve as an alternative diagnostic strategy.
    Abstract

    Importance There are no prospective cohort studies assessing the incidence and spectrum of neurologic manifestations secondary to Zika virus (ZIKV) infection in adults.
    Objective To evaluate the rates of acute ZIKV infection among patients hospitalized with Guillain-Barr? syndrome (GBS), meningoencephalitis, or transverse myelitis.
    Design, Setting, and Participants A prospective, observational cohort study was conducted at a tertiary referral center for neurological diseases in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, between December 5, 2015, and May 10, 2016, among consecutive hospitalized adults (>18 years of age) with new-onset acute parainfectious or neuroinflammatory disease. All participants were tested for a series of arbovirosis. Three-month functional outcome was assessed.
    Interventions Samples of serum and cerebrospinal fluid were tested for ZIKV using real-time reverse-transcriptase?polymerase chain reaction and an IgM antibody-capture enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Clinical, radiographic (magnetic resonance imaging), electrophysiological, and 3-month functional outcome data were collected.
    Main Outcomes and Measures The detection of neurologic complications secondary to ZIKV infection.
    Results Forty patients (15 women and 25 men; median age, 44 years [range, 22-72 years]) were enrolled, including 29 patients (73%) with GBS (90% Brighton level 1 certainty), 7 (18%) with encephalitis, 3 (8%) with transverse myelitis, and 1 (3%) with newly diagnosed chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy. Of these, 35 patients (88%) had molecular and/or serologic evidence of recent ZIKV infection in the serum and/or cerebrospinal fluid. Of the patients positive for ZIKV infection, 27 had GBS (18 demyelinating, 8 axonal, and 1 Miller Fisher syndrome), 5 had encephalitis (3 with concomitant acute neuromuscular disease), 2 had transverse myelitis, and 1 had chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy. Admission to the intensive care unit was required for 9 patients positive for ZIKV infection (26%), and 5 (14%) required mechanical ventilation. Compared with admission during the period from December 5, 2013, to May 10, 2014 (before the Brazilian outbreak of ZIKV), admissions for GBS increased from a mean of 1.0 per month to 5.6 per month, admissions for encephalitis increased from 0.4 per month to 1.4 per month, and admissions for transverse myelitis remained constant at 0.6 per month. At 3 months, 2 patients positive for ZIKV infection (6%) died (1 with GBS and 1 with encephalitis), 18 (51%) had chronic pain, and the median modified Rankin score among survivors was 2 (range, 0-5).
    Conclusions and Relevance In this single-center Brazilian cohort, ZIKV infection was associated with an increase in the incidence of a diverse spectrum of serious neurologic syndromes. The data also suggest that serologic and molecular testing using blood and cerebrospinal fluid samples can serve as a less expensive, alternative diagnostic strategy in developing countries, where plaque reduction neutralization testing is impractical.

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  • #2
    The Expanding Spectrum of Zika Virus Infections of the Nervous System

    Kenneth L. Tyler, MD1,2,3; Karen L. Roos, MD4
    Author Affiliations Article Information
    JAMA Neurol. Published online August 14, 2017. doi:10.1001/jamaneurol.2017.1471






    Zika virus was first isolated in 1947 from the blood of a captive rhesus macaque on an elevated platform in the tree canopy of the Zika Forest, presumably infected by mosquitos.1 Human infection with the Zika virus was not documented until the early 1950s, and most reports prior to the current outbreaks in the Americas in 2015 emphasized the relatively benign nature of infection. Reports from Micronesia in 2007 and French Polynesia in 2013 suggested that approximately 80% of infections were asymptomatic and that the remaining 20% of infected individuals developed a combination of rash, fever, arthralgia, conjunctivitis, myalgia, and headache (listed in descending order of frequency).2


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