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Human herpesviruses-6 and -7 each cause significant neurological morbidity in Britain and Ireland.

Authors :
Ward, K. N.
Ancirews, N. J.
Verily, C. M.
Miller, E.
Ross, E. M.
Source :
Archives of Disease in Childhood. Jun2005, Vol. 90 Issue 6, p619-623. 5p.
Publication Year :
2005

Abstract

Background: Primary human herpesvirus-6 and -7 (HHV-6/-7) infections cause febrile illness sometimes complicated by convulsions and rarely encephalopathy. Aims: To explore the extent of such HHV-6 and -7 induced disease in young children. Methods: In a three year prospective study in Britain and Ireland, 205 children (2-35 months old) hospitalized with suspected encephalitis and/or severe illness with fever and convulsions were reported via he British Paediatric Surveillance Unit network. Blood samples were tested for primary HHV-6 and -7 infections. Results: 26/156 (17%) of children aged 2-23 months had primary infection (11 HHV-6; 13 HHV-7; two with both viruses) coinciding with the acute illness; this was much higher than the about three cases expected by chance. All 26 were pyrexical; 25 had convulsions (18 status epileptic's), 11 requiring ventilation. Median hospital stay was 7.5 days. For HI-JV-6 primary infection the median age was 53 weeks (range 42-94) and the distribution differed from that of uninfected children; for HI-IV-7, the median was 60 weeks (range 17-102) and the distribution did not differ for the uninfected. Fewer (5/15) children with primary HHV-7 infection had previously been infected with HHV-6 than expected. Conclusions: Primary HHV-6 and HHV-7 infections accounted for a significant proportion of cases in those 2 years old of severe illness with fever and convulsions requiring hospital admission; each virus contributed equally. Predisposing factors are age for HHV-6 and no previous infection with I-II-IV-6 for HHV-7. Children with such neurological disease should be investigated for primary I-IHV-6/-7 infections, especially in rare cases coinciding by chance with immunisation to exclude misdiagnosis as vaccine reactions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00039888
Volume :
90
Issue :
6
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Archives of Disease in Childhood
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
17276730
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/adc.2004.062216