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Human Parechovirus Infection in Neonates and Children: An Overview

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-22, 03:41 authored by Shee, A, Heinrich WeberHeinrich Weber
Pediatricians are becoming increasingly aware of the emergence of human parechovirus (HPeV) following several reports of potentially life-threatening infection in early infancy across the globe from Europe to Australia with episodic seasonal outbreaks. The severity of the HPeV infection varies widely from sporadic mild respiratory or gastrointestinal tract infection in older children to epidemic severe sepsis, myocarditis, and meningoencephalitis in young infants up to 3 months of age. Early complete recovery may sometimes be falsely reassuring, which later can lead to poor neurodevelopmental outcomes. The underlying causative viral agent of meningoencephalitis may remain elusive if a specific laboratory test for HPeV is not requested. Unlike Enterovirus (EV), cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) analysis in HPeV infection may remain misleadingly normal without pleocytosis or abnormal glucose and protein values even in PCR-positive cases. In this review article we attempt to summarize the important clinical information relevant to the practicing pediatricians about HPeV, particularly about its most pathogenic type, HPeV genotype 3 (HPeV3) along with its complications, possible treatment options, and future research direction.

History

Publication title

Journal of Pediatric Infectious Diseases

Volume

12

Pagination

99-103

ISSN

1305-7707

Department/School

Tasmanian School of Medicine

Publisher

Georg Thieme Verlag

Place of publication

Germany

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Expanding knowledge in the health sciences

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