Viruses (Jun 2024)

Neuro-Ophthalmic Dengue Infection: A Case Report with a Multiple Body Site Sampling Strategy and Review of Laboratory Data

  • Grace I. Butel-Simoes,
  • Nupur Bajaj,
  • Sultan Asad,
  • Jean Moselen,
  • Nicole Orlando,
  • Eike Steinig,
  • Thomas Tran,
  • Julian Druce,
  • Leon Caly,
  • Emma Bishop,
  • Chanad Harangozo,
  • Chuan Kok Lim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/v16070998
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 7
p. 998

Abstract

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Dengue neurological disease is an uncommon yet severe complication of dengue infection. It can manifest as encephalitis, encephalopathy, neuro-ophthalmic complications, or neuromuscular disorders. Severe infection can result in viral shedding across multiple body sites. We describe a case of severe neuro-ophthalmic dengue infection in an otherwise healthy returned traveller, presenting with prolonged multiple-body-site viral detections by PCR. The dengue virus (DENV) dynamics and serological response support a direct DENV neuropathogenicity. A retrospective review of the laboratory data at the Victorian Infectious Diseases Reference Laboratory (VIDRL) suggests that blood is the most frequent sample type with DENV detection (92% of all DENV-positive samples). Genotype variation is seen across different sample types. The similarity of CSF and nasopharyngeal DENV subtypes (genotype 1 and 3) suggests a possible correlation between nasopharyngeal replication and neurological complications. The case presented highlights the direct neuropathogenicity of DENV early in the course of infection, and a potential correlation between nasopharyngeal replication and neurological disease.

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