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Cited 21 time in webofscience Cited 26 time in scopus
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Respiratory syncytial virus-related encephalitis: magnetic resonance imaging findings with diffusion-weighted study

Authors
Park, ArimSuh, Sang-ilSon, Gyu-RiLee, Young HenSeo, Hyung SukEun, Baik-LinLee, Nam-JoonSeol, Hae-Young
Issue Date
Feb-2014
Publisher
SPRINGER
Keywords
Respiratory syncytial virus; Encephalitis; Magnetic resonance
Citation
NEURORADIOLOGY, v.56, no.2, pp 163 - 168
Pages
6
Indexed
SCI
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
NEURORADIOLOGY
Volume
56
Number
2
Start Page
163
End Page
168
URI
https://scholarworks.korea.ac.kr/kumedicine/handle/2020.sw.kumedicine/9593
DOI
10.1007/s00234-013-1305-z
ISSN
0028-3940
1432-1920
Abstract
Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a common pathogen causing acute respiratory infection in children. Herein, we describe the incidence and clinical and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings of RSV-related encephalitis, a major neurological complication of RSV infection. We retrospectively reviewed the medical records and imaging findings of the patients over the past 7 years who are admitted to our medical center and are tested positive for RSV-RNA by reverse transcriptase PCR. In total, 3,856 patients were diagnosed with RSV bronchiolitis, and 28 of them underwent brain MRI for the evaluation of neurologic symptoms; 8 of these 28 patients had positive imaging findings. Five of these 8 patients were excluded because of non-RSV-related pathologies, such as subdural hemorrhage, brain volume loss due to status epilepticus, periventricular leukomalacia, preexisting ventriculomegaly, and hypoxic brain injury. The incidence of RSV-related encephalitis was as follows: 3/3,856 (0.08 %) of the patients are positive for RSV RNA, 3/28 (10.7 %) of the patient underwent brain MRI for neurological symptom, and 3/8 (37.5 %) of patients revealed abnormal MR findings. The imaging findings were suggestive of patterns of rhombenmesencephalitis, encephalitis with acute disseminated encephalomyelitis, and limbic encephalitis. They demonstrated no diffusion abnormality on diffusion-weighted image and symptom improvement on the follow-up study. Encephalitis with RSV bronchiolitis occurs rarely. However, on brain MRI performed upon suspicion of neurologic involvement, RSV encephalitis is not infrequently observed among the abnormal MR findings and may mimic other viral and limbic encephalitis. Physicians should be aware of this entity to ensure proper diagnosis and neurologic care of RSV-positive patients.
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2. Clinical Science > Department of Pediatrics > 1. Journal Articles
2. Clinical Science > Department of Radiology > 1. Journal Articles

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Suh, Sang Il
Guro Hospital (Department of Radiology, Guro Hospital)
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