Kathryn Yang, Rebecca Lindsay, Vicente Quiroz, Rasha Srouji, Darius Ebrahimi-Fakhari
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Spectrum and Evolution of Movement Disorder Phenomenology in a Pediatric Powassan Encephalitis Case Series.
Background: The Powassan virus is a rare neurotropic, tick-borne arbovirus associated with meningoencephalitis. Despite the virus's known predilection for the basal ganglia, there are no reports detailing the spectrum of movement disorders in children with Powassan meningoencephalitis.
Cases: We present 3 cases of pediatric Powassan encephalitis, highlighting the diverse and evolving movement disorders associated with this disease. We observed subcortical myoclonus and progressive generalized dystonia (patient 1), transient dyskinesias and refractory focal dystonia (patient 2), and generalized dystonia evolving into chorea and lingual dyskinesias (patient 3). One patient exhibited multifocal vasculitis on magnetic resonance imaging angiography, a novel finding.
Conclusions: Movement disorders were a primary source of the morbidity experienced by pediatric Powassan encephalitis patients throughout their disease course, underscoring the importance of regular monitoring and adaptable treatment strategies in this condition. Larger, prospective studies are necessary to fully delineate the spectrum of associated movement disorders in this rare and severe disease.
期刊介绍:
Movement Disorders Clinical Practice- is an online-only journal committed to publishing high quality peer reviewed articles related to clinical aspects of movement disorders which broadly include phenomenology (interesting case/case series/rarities), investigative (for e.g- genetics, imaging), translational (phenotype-genotype or other) and treatment aspects (clinical guidelines, diagnostic and treatment algorithms)