Department of Emergency Medicine, Somogy County Kaposi Mór Teaching Hospital, Tallián Gyula Street, 20-32, Kaposvár, 7400, Hungary.
Department of Public Health, Medical School, University of Pécs, Szigeti Street, 12, Pécs, 7624, Hungary.
BMC Infect Dis. 2021 Jan 13;21(1):65. doi: 10.1186/s12879-020-05760-7.
West Nile virus (WNV) infections have become increasingly prevalent in certain European countries, including Hungary. Although most human infections do not cause severe symptoms, in approximately 1% of cases WNV infections can lead to severe WNV neuroinvasive disease (WNND) and death. The goal of our study was to assess the neurological status changes of WNV -infected patients admitted to inpatient care and to identify potential risk factors as underlying reasons for severe neurological outcome.
We conducted a retrospective chart review of 66 WNV-infected patients from four Hungarian medical centers. Patients' neurological status at hospital admission and at two follow-up intervals (1st follow-up, within 60-90 days and 2nd follow-up, within 150-180 days, after hospital discharge) were assessed. All of the 66 patients in the initial sample had some type of neurological symptoms and 56 patients were diagnosed with WNND. The modified Rankin Scale (mRS) and the West Nile Virus Neurological Index (WNV-N Index), a scoring system designed for the purpose of this study, were used for neurological status assessment. Patients were dichotomized into two categories, "moderately severe" and "severe" based on their neurological status. Descriptive analysis for sample description, stratified analysis for calculation of odds ratio (OR) and logistic regression for continuous input variables, were performed.
The average number of days between the onset of neurological symptoms and hospital admission (the neurological symptom interval) was 6.01 days. Complications during the hospital stay arose in almost a fifth of the patients (18.2%) and 5 patients died. Each day's increase in the neurological symptom interval significantly increased the risk for developing a severe neurological status following hospital admission (0.799-fold and 0.688-fold, based on the WNV-N Index and mRS, respectively). Patients' age, comorbidity, presence of complications and symptoms of malaise, and gait uncertainty were shown to be independent risk factors for severe neurological status.
Timely hospital admission of patients with neurological symptoms as well as risk assessment by clinicians - possibly with an optimal assessment tool for estimating neurological status- could improve the neurological outcome of WNV-infected patients.
西尼罗河病毒(WNV)感染在一些欧洲国家(包括匈牙利)越来越普遍。尽管大多数人类感染不会引起严重症状,但在大约 1%的病例中,WNV 感染可导致严重的 WNV 神经侵袭性疾病(WNND)和死亡。我们研究的目的是评估住院患者的 WNV 感染患者的神经状态变化,并确定潜在的危险因素作为严重神经后果的根本原因。
我们对来自匈牙利四家医疗中心的 66 例 WNV 感染患者进行了回顾性图表审查。在入院时以及两个随访间隔(1 次随访,在出院后 60-90 天内和 2 次随访,在出院后 150-180 天内)评估了患者的神经状态。初始样本中的所有 66 例患者都有某种类型的神经系统症状,56 例患者被诊断为 WNND。改良 Rankin 量表(mRS)和西尼罗河病毒神经指数(WNV-N 指数),这是为本次研究设计的评分系统,用于评估神经状态。根据患者的神经状态将患者分为“中度严重”和“严重”两类。对样本描述进行描述性分析,对计算比值比(OR)进行分层分析,对连续输入变量进行逻辑回归分析。
从神经系统症状发作到入院的平均天数(神经系统症状间隔)为 6.01 天。几乎五分之一的患者(18.2%)在住院期间出现并发症,有 5 例患者死亡。住院期间神经系统症状间隔每天增加,明显增加了入院后发生严重神经状态的风险(基于 WNV-N 指数和 mRS,分别为 0.799 倍和 0.688 倍)。患者的年龄、合并症、并发症和不适症状的出现以及步态不稳定被证明是严重神经状态的独立危险因素。
及时将有神经系统症状的患者送往医院,以及临床医生进行风险评估(可能使用最佳的评估工具来估计神经系统状态),可以改善 WNV 感染患者的神经预后。