Rotavirus and Central Nervous System Symptoms: Cause or Contaminant? Case Reports and Review

Maureen Lynch(National Center for Infectious Diseases), Brian Lee(Oakland University), Parvin H. Azimi(Oakland University), Jon R. Gentsch(National Center for Infectious Diseases), Carol Glaser, Sabrina Gilliam, Hwa‐Gan H. Chang(New York State Department of Health), R. Ward(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Roger I. Glass(National Center for Infectious Diseases)
Clinical Infectious Diseases
October 1, 2001
Cited by 191

Abstract

Rotavirus is a common cause of severe gastroenteritis in children. In 2 patients with rotavirus gastroenteritis who developed encephalopathy, rotavirus RNA was detected in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction; in 1 patient, rotavirus RNA was detected on 2 occasions 3 weeks apart. There are increasing reports of cases in which patients who have seizures after an episode of rotavirus diarrhea have evidence of rotavirus in their CSF. A search of 2 large hospital discharge databases suggested that seizures are noted as part of the discharge diagnosis in the records of, at most, <4% of patients with rotavirus diarrhea versus 7% of patients with bacterial diarrhea. Although evidence suggesting that rotavirus is a cause of central nervous system sequelae remains inconclusive, the 2 case reports presented in this study further illustrate a possible association. Further study is required to determine whether detection of rotavirus in CSF represents a true pathogen, CSF contamination that occurs at the time of lumbar puncture or in the laboratory, or carriage of rotavirus RNA in trafficking lymphocytes.


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