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Relapsed and late-onset Nipah encephalitis
Authors:Tan Chong Tin  Goh Khean Jin  Wong Kum Thong  Sarji Sazilah Ahmad  Chua Kaw Bing  Chew Nee Kong  Murugasu Paramsothy  Loh Yet Lin  Chong Heng Thay  Tan Kay Sin  Thayaparan Tarmizi  Kumar Shalini  Jusoh Mohd Rani
Institution:Department of Medicine, University of Malaya, 50603 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. tlip@pl.jaring.my
Abstract:An outbreak of infection with the Nipah virus, a novel paramyxovirus, occurred among pig farmers between September 1998 and June 1999 in Malaysia, involving 265 patients with 105 fatalities. This is a follow-up study 24 months after the outbreak. Twelve survivors (7.5%) of acute encephalitis had recurrent neurological disease (relapsed encephalitis). Of those who initially had acute nonencephalitic or asymptomatic infection, 10 patients (3.4%) had late-onset encephalitis. The mean interval between the first neurological episode and the time of initial infection was 8.4 months. Three patients had a second neurological episode. The onset of the relapsed or late-onset encephalitis was usually acute. Common clinical features were fever, headache, seizures, and focal neurological signs. Four of the 22 relapsed and late-onset encephalitis patients (18%) died. Magnetic resonance imaging typically showed patchy areas of confluent cortical lesions. Serial single-photon emission computed tomography showed the evolution of focal hyperperfusion to hypoperfusion in the corresponding areas. Necropsy of 2 patients showed changes of focal encephalitis with positive immunolocalization for Nipah virus antigens but no evidence of perivenous demyelination. We concluded that a unique relapsing and remitting encephalitis or late-onset encephalitis may result as a complication of persistent Nipah virus infection in the central nervous system.
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