Chickenpox and Stroke in Childhood

Author:

Askalan Rand1,Laughlin Suzanne1,Mayank Supriya1,Chan Anthony1,MacGregor Daune1,Andrew Maureen1,Curtis Rosalind1,Meaney Brandon1,deVeber Gabrielle1

Affiliation:

1. From the Hospital for Sick Children and the University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada (R.A., S.L., S.M., A.C., D.M., M.A., R.C., G.deV.), and the Children’s Hospital at HHSC, Hamilton, Canada (B.M., G.deV.).

Abstract

Background and Purpose —The purpose of this study was to determine whether infection with varicella is causal for arterial ischemic stroke (AIS) in children. Methods —First, a prospective cohort study was conducted in young children (aged 6 months to 10 years) with AIS at 2 institutions (cohort study). The presence of varicella infection <12 months before AIS was determined and compared with the published frequency of varicella infection in the healthy pediatric population. The clinical and radiographic features of AIS were compared between the varicella and nonvaricella study cohorts. Second, a literature search of varicella-associated AIS was conducted, and the clinical and radiographic features were compared with the study nonvaricella cohort. Results —In the cohort study, 22 (31%) of 70 consecutive children with AIS had a varicella infection in the preceding year compared with 9% in the healthy population. Children in the varicella cohort were more likely to have basal ganglia infarcts ( P <0.001), abnormal cerebral vascular imaging ( P <0.05), and recurrent AIS or transient ischemic attacks ( P <0.05) than those in the nonvaricella cohort. The pooled literature analysis of 51 cases of varicella-associated AIS showed similar findings to the varicella cohort. Conclusion —In young children with AIS, there is a 3-fold increase in preceding varicella infection compared with published population rates, and varicella-associated AIS accounts for nearly one third of childhood AIS. Varicella-associated AIS has characteristic features, including a 2-fold increase in recurrent AIS and transient ischemic attacks. Varicella is an important risk factor for childhood AIS.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Advanced and Specialised Nursing,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Clinical Neurology

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