Frontiers in Human Neuroscience (Aug 2021)

Recurrence, Reactivation, or Inflammatory Rebound of SARS-CoV-2 Infection With Acute Vestibular Symptoms: A Case Report and Revision of Literature

  • Salvatore Zaffina,
  • Salvatore Zaffina,
  • Paola Lanteri,
  • Francesco Gilardi,
  • Sergio Garbarino,
  • Annapaola Santoro,
  • Maria Rosaria Vinci,
  • Maria Rosaria Vinci,
  • Rita Carsetti,
  • Alessandro Scorpecci,
  • Massimiliano Raponi,
  • Nicola Magnavita,
  • Nicola Magnavita,
  • Vincenzo Camisa,
  • Vincenzo Camisa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2021.666468
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15

Abstract

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A case of recurrent coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) with neurovestibular symptoms was reported. In March 2020, a physician working in an Italian pediatric hospital had flu-like symptoms with anosmia and dysgeusia, and following a reverse transcription PCR (RT/PCR) test with a nasopharyngeal swab tested positive for SARS-CoV-2. After home quarantine, 21 days from the beginning of the symptoms, the patient tested negative in two subsequent swabs and was declared healed and readmitted to work. Serological testing showed a low level of immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibody title and absence of immunoglobulin M (IgM). However, 2 weeks later, before resuming work, the patient complained of acute vestibular syndrome, and the RT/PCR test with mucosal swab turned positive. On the basis of the literature examined and reviewed for recurrence cases and vestibular symptoms during COVID-19, to our knowledge this case is the first case of recurrence with vestibular impairment as a neurological symptom, and we defined it as probably a viral reactivation. The PCR retest positivity cannot differentiate re-infectivity, relapse, and dead-viral RNA detection. Serological antibody testing and viral genome sequencing could be always performed in recurrence cases.

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