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Sleep EEG of Microcephaly in Zika Outbreak. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Microcephaly (MC) became a global health concern due to the Zika virus outbreak in 2015, leading researchers to analyze EEG findings in children born with MC in Brazil during this period.
  • The study reviewed EEGs from 23 children, revealing that many had mothers with positive serology for various infections, including Zika, and showed prevalent diffuse slowing as a primary EEG abnormality.
  • The authors suggest that distinct EEG patterns found in cases of Zika and other infections may link them to MC, calling for EEG evaluations in newly diagnosed congenital MC cases, particularly in regions with active Zika transmission.

Article Abstract

Microcephaly (MC), previously considered rare, is now a health emergency of international concern because of the devastating Zika virus pandemic outbreak of 2015. The authors describe the electroencephalogram (EEG) findings in sleep EEG of epileptic children who were born with microcephaly in areas of Brazil with active Zika virus transmission between 2014 and 2017. The authors reviewed EEGs from 23 children. Nine were females (39.2%), and the age distribution varied from 4 to 48 months. MC was associated with mother positive serology to toxoplasmosis (toxo), rubella (rub), herpes, and dengue (1 case); toxo (1 case); chikungunya virus (CHIKV) (1 case); syphilis (1 case); and Zika virus (ZIKV) (10 cases). In addition, 1 case was associated with perinatal hypoxia and causes of 9 cases remain unknown. The main background EEG abnormality was diffuse slowing (10 cases), followed by classic (3 cases) and modified (5 cases) hypsarrhythmia. A distinct EEG pattern was seen in ZIKV (5 cases), toxo (2 cases), and undetermined cause (1 case). It was characterized by runs of frontocentrotemporal 4.5-13 Hz activity (7 cases) or diffuse and bilateral runs of 18-24 Hz (1 case). In ZIKV, this rhythmic activity was associated with hypsarrhythmia or slow background. Further studies are necessary to determine if this association is suggestive of ZIKV infection. The authors believe that EEG should be included in the investigation of all newly diagnosed congenital MC, especially those occurring in areas of autochthonous transmission of ZIKV.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21646821.2018.1428461DOI Listing

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