Center for BrainHealth, University of Texas at Dallas, Dallas, TX, USA.
BMC Infect Dis. 2014 May 9;14:248. doi: 10.1186/1471-2334-14-248.
West Nile Virus (WNV) is a mosquito-borne flavivirus that has caused ongoing seasonal epidemics in the United States since 1999. It is estimated that ≤1% of WNV-infected patients will develop neuroinvasive disease (West Nile encephalitis and/or myelitis) that can result in debilitating morbidities and long-term sequelae. It is essential to collect longitudinal information about the recovery process and to characterize predicative factors that may assist in therapeutic decision-making in the future.
We report a longitudinal study of the neurological outcomes (as measured by neurological examination, Glascow Coma Scale, and Modified Mini-Mental State Examination) for 55 subjects with WNV neuroinvasive disease (confirmed by positive CSF IgM) assessed on day 7, at discharge, and on days 14, 30, and 90. The neurological outcome measures were coma (presence and degree), global cognitive status, presence of cranial neuropathy, tremors and/or weakness.
At initial clinical presentation 93% presented with a significant neurological deficit (49% with weakness, 35% with tremor, and 16% with cranial neuropathy). The number of patients with a cognitive deficit fell from 25 at initial evaluation to 9 at their last evaluation. Cranial neuropathy was present in 9 at onset and in only 4 patients at study conclusion. Of the 19 patients who had a tremor at enrollment, 11 continued to exhibit a tremor at follow-up. Seven patients died after initial enrollment in the study, with 5 of those having presented in a coma. The factors that predict either severity or long-term recovery of neurological function include age (older individuals were weaker at follow-up examination), gender (males recovered better from coma), and presentation in a coma with cranial nerve deficits (had a poorer recovery particularly with regard to cognition).
This study represents one of the largest clinical investigations providing prospectively-acquired neurological outcomes data among American patients with WNV central nervous system disease. The findings show that the factors that influence prognosis from the initial presentation include age, gender, and specific neurological deficits at onset.
ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT00138463 and NCT00069316.
西尼罗河病毒(WNV)是一种经蚊子传播的黄病毒,自 1999 年以来,已导致美国持续季节性流行。据估计,≤1%的 WNV 感染患者会发展为神经侵袭性疾病(西尼罗河脑炎和/或脊髓炎),这可能导致致残性发病率和长期后遗症。收集关于恢复过程的纵向信息并描述可能有助于未来治疗决策的预测因素至关重要。
我们报告了一项对 55 例西尼罗河神经侵袭性疾病(通过脑脊液 IgM 阳性确诊)患者的纵向研究,这些患者在第 7 天、出院时以及第 14、30 和 90 天进行了神经学评估。神经学评估包括昏迷(存在和程度)、总体认知状态、颅神经病变、震颤和/或无力。
在最初的临床表现中,93%的患者存在显著的神经功能缺损(49%的患者有无力,35%的患者有震颤,16%的患者有颅神经病变)。在初始评估时有认知障碍的患者人数从 25 人下降到最后一次评估时的 9 人。在发病时存在颅神经病变的患者为 9 例,在研究结束时仅为 4 例。在入组时有震颤的 19 例患者中,有 11 例在随访时仍有震颤。在最初入组研究后有 7 例患者死亡,其中 5 例在昏迷状态下入院。预测神经功能严重程度或长期恢复的因素包括年龄(年龄较大的患者在后续检查中更虚弱)、性别(男性从昏迷中恢复得更好)以及伴有颅神经缺陷的昏迷状态(恢复较差,尤其是在认知方面)。
这项研究是针对美国西尼罗河中枢神经系统疾病患者进行的最大规模的临床调查之一,提供了前瞻性获得的神经学结果数据。研究结果表明,影响初始表现预后的因素包括年龄、性别和发病时的特定神经缺陷。
ClinicalTrials.gov 标识符:NCT00138463 和 NCT00069316。