Encephalitis in the Course of HHV-7 Infection in an Infant

Author:

Moppert Justyna12ORCID,Łężyk-Ciemniak Eliza2,Pawłowska Małgorzata12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Infectious Diseases and Hepatology, Collegium Medicum, Bydgoszcz, Nicolaus Copernicus University, 87-100 Torun, Poland

2. Department of Paediatrics, Infectious Diseases and Hepatology, Voivodeship Infectious Observation Hospital, 85-030 Bydgoszcz, Poland

Abstract

Most cases of acute infections caused by human herpesvirus 7 (HHV-7) are asymptomatic or very mild. Clinical symptoms disappear spontaneously; however, the infection becomes latent and persists for life with periodic asymptomatic reactivation. Little is known about the virus’s ability to cross the blood–brain barrier. Our case of an immunocompetent infant indicates that HHV-7 infection should be considered a cause of neuroinfection, not only in immunocompromised patients but also in the youngest immunocompetent patients.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

Reference11 articles.

1. Delayed primary HHV-7 infection and neurological disease;Schwartz;Paediatrics,2014

2. Foiadelli, T., Rossi, V., Paolucci, S., Rovida, F., Novazzi, F., Orsini, A., Brambilla, I., Marseglia, G.L., Baldanti, F., and Savasta, S. (2022). Human herpes virus 7-related encephalopathy in children. Acta Biomed., 21.

3. Detection frequency of human herpesviruses-6 A, -6B, and -7 genomic sequences in central nervous system DNA samples from postmortem individuals with unspecified encephalopathy;Chapenko;J. Neurovirol.,2016

4. Encephalitis associated with human herpesvirus-7 infection in an immunocompetent adult;Parra;Virol. J.,2017

5. Herpesvirus;Sikorska;Aktualn. Neurol.,2007

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