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Browsing by Subject "Encephalitis"
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Item A 2-year-old boy with hemolytic uremic syndrome and pneumocephalus(Wiley, 2012-01) Martin, Sarah E.; Allen, Steven D.; Faught, Phillip; Hawley, Dean A.; Bonnin, Jose M.; Hattab, Eyas M.; Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, School of MedicineClostridium septicum infection following hemolytic uremic syndrome is rare and carries a poor prognosis, especially when the brain is involved. We report a case of a previously healthy 2-year-old boy who presented with two days of anuria and bloody diarrhea. He was admitted to the local children's hospital with a diagnosis of hemolytic uremic syndrome, presumably secondary to E. coli O157. He soon required intubation and was noted to have fixed and dilated pupils. Head CT revealed left frontal subcortical white matter vasogenic edema and scattered pockets of pneumocephalus. The patient expired 14 hours after admission. Antemortem blood cultures grew C. septicum. Gross pathologic examination of the brain revealed a large intraparenchymal cerebral hemorrhage in the left frontal and parietal lobes. There was extensive cystic changes as well. Microscopic examination revealed vacuolization and diffuse colonization with rod-shaped bacteria, but without the expected tissue response. There have been only six previously reported cases of C. septicum infection following hemolytic uremic syndrome, four of which had brain involvement. Mortality rate is high, with the only known survivor among those with brain involvement having a brain abscess rather than diffuse pneumocephalus.Item Brain Death Secondary to Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever Encephalitis(Hindawi, 2020-05-01) Rhodes, Steven D.; Teagarden, Alicia M.; Graner, Brian; Lutfi, Riad; John, Chandy C.; Pediatrics, School of MedicineA two-year-old female presented with acutely altered mental status following eight days of fever and rash. She had been camping at an Indiana campground 11 days prior to the onset of illness and was evaluated twice for her fever and rash prior to admission. Laboratory evaluation on admission revealed thrombocytopenia, hyponatremia, and elevated transaminases. The patient developed diffuse cerebral edema, and despite intensive care, the edema led to brain death from Rocky Mountain spotted fever (RMSF). We present this case to highlight the importance of considering RMSF and other tick-borne illnesses in a child with prolonged fever and rash in a nonendemic area and also the difficulty of diagnosis in early stages of disease. A detailed travel history, evaluation of key laboratory findings (white blood count, platelet count, and transaminases), and close follow-up if rash and fevers persist may help to improve detection of RMSF. If a tick-borne illness such as RMSF is suspected, empiric doxycycline therapy should be started immediately, as lab confirmation may take several days and mortality increases greatly after five days of symptoms.Item Loss of survival factors and activation of inflammatory cascades in brain sympathetic centers in type 1 diabetic mice(American Physiological Society, 2015-04-15) Hu, Ping; Thinschmidt, Jeffrey S.; Caballero, Sergio; Adamson, Samuel; Cole, Louise; Chan-Ling, Tailoi; Grant, Maria B.; Department of Ophthalmology, IU School of MedicineNeuroinflammation and neurodegeneration have been observed in the brain in type 1 diabetes (T1D). However, little is known about the mediators of these effects. In T1D mice with 12- and 35-wk duration of diabetes we examined two mechanisms of neurodegeneration, loss of the neuroprotective factors insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) and IGF-binding protein-3 (IGFBP-3) and changes in indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) expression in the brain, and compared the response to age-matched controls. Furthermore, levels of matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2), nucleoside triphosphate diphosphohydrolase-1 (CD39), and ionized calcium-binding adaptor molecule 1 (Iba-1) were utilized to assess inflammatory changes in astrocytes, microglia, and blood vessels. In the diabetic hypothalamus (HYPO), we observed 20% reduction in neuronal soma diameter (P<0.05) and reduced neuronal expression of IGFBP-3 (-32%, P<0.05) and IGF-I (-15%, P<0.05) compared with controls at 35 wk. In diabetic HYPO, MMP-2 expression was increased in astrocytes (46%, P<0.01), and IDO⁺ cell density rose by (62%, P<0.05). CD39 expression dropped by 30% (P<0.05) in microglia and blood vessels. With 10 wk of systemic treatment using minocycline, an anti-inflammatory agent that crosses the blood-brain barrier, MMP-2, IDO, and CD39 levels normalized (P<0.05). Our results suggest that increased IDO and early loss of CD39⁺ protective cells lead to activation of inflammation in sympathetic centers of the CNS. As a downstream effect, the loss of the neuronal survival factors IGFBP-3 and IGF-I and the neurotoxic products of the kynurenine pathway contribute to the loss of neuronal density observed in the HYPO in T1D.Item A Novel Mechanism for Zika Virus Host-Cell Binding(MDPI, 2019-11-28) Rieder, Courtney A.,; Rieder, Jonathan; Sannajust, Sebastién; Goode, Diana; Geguchadze, Ramaz; Relich, Ryan F.; Molliver, Derek C.; King, Tamara E.; Vaughn, James; May, Meghan; Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, School of MedicineZika virus (ZIKV) recently emerged in the Western Hemisphere with previously unrecognized or unreported clinical presentations. Here, we identify two putative binding mechanisms of ancestral and emergent ZIKV strains featuring the envelope (E) protein residue asparagine 154 (ASN154) and viral phosphatidylserine (PS). Synthetic peptides representing the region containing ASN154 from strains PRVABC59 (Puerto Rico 2015) and MR_766 (Uganda 1947) were exposed to neuronal cells and fibroblasts to model ZIKV E protein/cell interactions and bound MDCK or Vero cells and primary neurons significantly. Peptides significantly inhibited Vero cell infectivity by ZIKV strains MR_766 and PRVABC59, indicating that this region represents a putative binding mechanism of ancestral African ZIKV strains and emergent Western Hemisphere strains. Pretreatment of ZIKV strains MR_766 and PRVABC59 with the PS-binding protein annexin V significantly inhibited replication of PRVABC59 but not MR_766, suggesting that Western hemisphere strains may additionally be capable of utilizing PS-mediated entry to infect host cells. These data indicate that the region surrounding E protein ASN154 is capable of binding fibroblasts and primary neuronal cells and that PS-mediated entry may be a secondary mechanism for infectivity utilized by Western Hemisphere strains.