International Journal of Infectious Diseases (Sep 2023)

Influenza-associated neurologic complications in children from an H3N2 outbreak in Shenzhen, China during COVID-19 lockdown

  • Ruimu Zhang,
  • Jialun Wen,
  • Kai Wu,
  • Sufang Lin,
  • Kun Tan,
  • Jiajia Bi,
  • Jikui Deng

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 134
pp. 91 – 94

Abstract

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Objectives: To identify the characteristics of influenza-associated neurologic complications (INCs) in children from a recent H3N2 outbreak in Shenzhen, China during COVID-19 lockdown. Methods: A retrospective cohort study of INCs in children hospitalized with H3N2 infection was conducted. Results: From June 01, 2022 to July 01, 2022, 513 children with H3N2 infection were hospitalized and 97 developed INCs. Of the 18 patients with encephalopathy/encephalitis, 13 were previously healthy. Three developed acute necrotizing encephalopathy and two died. Of the 63 patients with febrile seizures, 55 (87%) had simple febrile seizures. Of the 14 patients with an exacerbation of seizure with underlying epilepsy, the seizure symptoms occurred mostly within 24 hours of disease onset (13/14). The comparison of the three groups (encephalopathy/encephalitis, febrile seizure and exacerbation of seizure with underlying epilepsy) reported no significant differences in sex, pre-existing neurologic diseases, vaccination rate, white blood cell count, C-reactive protein, procalcitonin, blood glucose, lactic acid, or duration of fever. The influenza vaccination rates were generally low (22% vs 32% vs 21%). Patients with encephalopathy/encephalitis had a higher rate of elevated alanine aminotransferase (28% vs 3% vs 0, P = 0.005). Conclusion: H3N2-related neurologic complications in children mainly occur early in the disease course. Most patients were previously healthy and unvaccinated against influenza. Elevated alanine aminotransferase is more common in encephalopathy/encephalitis.

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