Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0009952 (febrile convulsions)
1,215 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

From September 1997 to March 2002, a total of 84 children were admitted to Chang Gung Children's Hospital due to influenza A virus infection. Influenza A virus infection was documented in 61 cases by viral isolation from throat and in 23 cases by serologic studies. The mean age of patients was 43.8 months, ranging from 20 days to 16 years. Forty-one (49%) patients were male. Lower respiratory tract infection (53 of 84 cases) was the most common clinical manifestation, occurring predominantly in children younger than 5 years (49 of 53 cases). The types of lower respiratory tract infection included bronchiolitis/bronchopneumonia in 33 cases, pneumonia in 17, and croup in 3. Central nervous system dysfunction was noted in 26 patients, predominantly in older children (18 of 26 cases). This included encephalopathy in 11 cases, encephalitis in 10, aseptic meningitis in 2, psychosis in 1, febrile convulsions in 1, and acute disseminated encephalomyelitis in 1. Gastrointestinal symptoms were mild in most patients. Diarrhea occurred in 18.4% of the children younger than 5 years, compared with only 8.4% of the older children. By contrast, abdominal pain was more common in older children (16.7%) than in younger children (6.7%). Ten children had leukocytosis (white blood cell > or = 15000 /microL) and 9 of them were younger than 5 years. Eleven children had a C-reactive protein level greater than 100 mg/L and 10 of them were younger than 5 years. The mean duration of fever and hospitalization were 4.6 +/- 2.8 days and 7.4 +/- 5.7 days, respectively. The clinical outcomes were excellent in all but 1 patient who died from intractable pulmonary hemorrhage. The frequency and duration of hospitalization due to influenza A virus is much greater than generally thought in Taiwan, suggesting an urgent need for educational programs to increase awareness of the characteristics and risks for this illness.
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PMID:Clinical characteristics of children with influenza A virus infection requiring hospitalization. 1288 62

Influenza-associated encephalopathy, a severe neurologic complication of influenza, is being reported more frequently in Japan. We investigated the transcription of cytokine genes in peripheral blood leukocytes and compared patients with influenza and with encephalopathy or febrile convulsions and patients with influenza but without neurologic complications. A quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR) revealed that transcription of the interleukin (IL)-6, IL-10, and tumor necrosis factor-alpha genes was up-regulated to a greater extent in patients with encephalopathy than in those without neurologic complications. Plasma IL-6 levels also were higher in patients with encephalopathy, although the difference was marginal. Viral RNA in throat swabs was quantified using a real-time quantitative PCR. The virus load was similar among patients with encephalopathy or febrile convulsions or without neurologic complications. Furthermore, virus load was not correlated with either the transcription of cytokine genes or plasma cytokine concentrations. These results suggest that influenza-associated encephalopathy might be a consequence of systemic immune responses.
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PMID:Systemic cytokine responses in patients with influenza-associated encephalopathy. 1474 15

Each year, at any age, children are at risk of influenza illness during the epidemics. Children, especially those at school (attack rate close to 30%), have a major role in viral dissemination. Most of influenza illnesses occur in healthy children. Manifestations are typical, as in adults, in children over 5 years of age and less specific in younger children explaining misdiagnosis and underestimation in the youngest. Respiratory complications in outpatients include acute otitis media (close to 30% in children less than 3 years of age) and pulmonary disease (5 up to 10%). High fever 240 degrees C is frequent. Febrile convulsions occur in about 20% of hospitalised children aged 6 month to 5 years. Other complications (encephalitis, myositis, myocarditis, etc.) are reported. Hospitalisation rate is a severity index. In children less than 5 years of age, it is as high as 500/100,000 when risk factors exist and 100/100,000 when absent. Influenza, which is a respiratory virus, is the only one for which both a vaccine and specific treatment (anti-neuraminidases) exist. They are detailed.
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PMID:[Against influenza in children, which actions?]. 1513 43

The role of viral infection in the etiology of febrile seizures is a relatively neglected field of neurologic research. A National Institutes of Health Consensus Conference (1981) omitted reference to causes of infections and the role of fever in febrile seizures, and emphasized outcome and anticonvulsant treatment. In an earlier review of the world literature (1924-1964), except for roseola infantum, viral infections as a cause of febrile seizures were rarely diagnosed. The present review includes reports of viruses most commonly associated with febrile seizures in the last decade, especially human herpesvirus-6 and influenza. The specificity and neurotropic properties of some viruses in the febrile seizure mechanism, a possible encephalitic or encephalopathic pathology, and the essential role of fever and height of the body temperature as a measure of the febrile seizure threshold are discussed. Cytokine and immune response to infection, and a genetic susceptibility to febrile seizures are additional etiologic factors. Future research should emphasize early detection of causative viruses, the nature of viral neurotropism, and the role of cytokines in fever induction. Trials of antiviral agents and vaccines, with attention to safety concerns, and more effective antipyretics would address the febrile seizure mechanism more specifically than anticonvulsant therapies.
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PMID:Role of viral infections in the etiology of febrile seizures. 1693 54

During a 29-month period, 11 (12%) of 92 hospitalized patients with influenza B virus infection presented neurologic manifestations, which included febrile seizure in 4 cases and encephalopathy/encephalitis in 7 cases. Without appropriate antiviral therapy, recovery was uneventful in all but 1 patient, who had neurologic sequelae of quadriplegia and developmental delay.
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PMID:Neurologic manifestations in children with influenza B virus infection. 1707 38

A 1-year-old girl with influenza-associated encephalopathy initially exhibited prolonged febrile convulsions and subsequent drowsiness. She became unconsciousness and experienced a cluster of seizures 4 days later. Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DWI) showed high signal intensity in the bilateral frontal white matter. This signal change migrated to the bifrontal cortical areas and the caudate nuclei within 10 days, when T2 elongation appeared over the gray and white matter of frontal lobes. Choreoathetosis and oculogyric crisis were transiently noted at this period. Frontal lobe signs, including the forded mouth opening response, after diminution of these movement disorders. The DWI signal change subsequently resolved and frontal cortical atrophy appeared thereafter. Levels of inflammatory cytokines in the cerebrospinal fluid were normal during the acute phase of clinical course. The biphasic clinical course with initial prolonged seizure, involvement of the frontal lobes, and the progression of signal change on DWI from white to gray matter, meets the characteristics of "status epilepticus-type acute encephalopathy" suggested by Shiomi et al. Although pentobarbital infusion, steroid pulse therapy and mild hypothermia did not show any apparent effects on the clinical course of this patient, further trial of these therapies may be warranted for the treatment of this type of encephalopathy.
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PMID:[Influenza-associated encephalopathy with onset of prolonged convulsion: a case report]. 1709 68

We studied the relation among serum cytokine levels, EEG changes, and mild neurological complications (delirium and febrile seizure) in children with influenza. The serum levels of interleukin-6 (IL-6), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), and soluble tumor necrosis factor receptor-1 (sTNFR-1) were measured in 27 children with proven influenza infection with mild neurological complications (10 patients with delirium and 17 with febrile seizures) and seven control children. EEG was recorded in 14 children with neurological complications. EEG showed focal slowing in four of nine patients with delirium and in four of five with febrile seizures. Generalized slowing was observed in one patient with delirium. The median serum IL-6 level was 31.2+/-15.1 pg/ml (range, 7.5-64.5 pg/ml) in the delirium group, 42.3+/-44.0 pg/ml (range, 8.0-196.0 pg/ml) in the febrile seizure group, and 15.4+/-7.0 pg/ml (range, 7.2-28.0 pg/ml) in the control group. Serum TNF-alpha and sTNFR-1 levels were not different among three groups. Mild neurological complications associated with influenza were related to the mildly abnormal serum IL-6 levels and EEG findings. The combination of these parameters will be useful for early diagnosis and differentiation of neurological complications in children with influenza. Further studies will be necessary for investigating that IL-6 has the diagnostic value for differentiation between severe encephalopathy and mild neurological complications in children with influenza.
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PMID:Serum levels of cytokines and EEG findings in children with influenza associated with mild neurological complications. 1728 1

Two Japanese infants with influenza A infection presented with a brief febrile seizure, followed by secondary seizures and disturbance of consciousness on day 5. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed reduced subcortical diffusion around day 5. Both were diagnosed with mild form of acute encephalopathy syndrome characterized by biphasic seizures and late reduced diffusion. It is important for clinicians in Asian countries to recognize and to inform parents that secondary progression may occur even after a brief febrile seizure with influenza.
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PMID:Mild influenza encephalopathy with biphasic seizures and late reduced diffusion. 1736 13

Matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) and tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases 1 (TIMP-1) play important roles in the function of the blood-brain barrier. Serum MMP-9 and TIMP-1 concentrations were determined in influenza virus infection with or without neurologic complications. Our results suggest that an imbalance between MMP-9 and TIMP-1 damages the blood-brain barrier and promotes febrile seizure or encephalopathy in influenza virus infection.
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PMID:Matrix metalloproteinase-9 and tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases 1 in influenza-associated encephalopathy. 1752 76

A feverish 5-year-old girl diagnosed with influenza A virus from a positive rapid influenza type A antigen test, and suffering pain and redness in her left knee had febrile convulsions and was admitted. Her knee pain and redness increased. She was diagnosed with acute osteomyelitis and subperiosteal abscess based on MRI. We started intravenous antibiotics and punctured and drained the abscess. S. pyogenes was isolated from blood and puncture pus culture and a rapid group A beta hemolytic Streptococcal antigen test was positive in a throat swab. After 10 days' drainage and 28 days' antibiotics treatment, she was discharged. Viral superinfections aggravate S. pyogenes infection both in animal models and human cases. This case gives futher evidence that superinfectious influenza A virus is a risk factor for severe S. pyogenes infection.
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PMID:[A case of acute osteomyelitis and subperiosteal abscess caused by Streptococcus pyogenes, presumably triggered by influenza A virus]. 1796 39


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