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Severe generalized disease (encephalohepatomyocarditis) occurring in the newborn period and due to infection with Coxsackie virus, group B; evidence of intrauterine infection with this agent.
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1958
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Newborn PeriodDiagnostic VirologyGroup BPathogenesisPediatricsPathologyVirologyInfective EndocarditisCoxsackie VirusGeneralized InfectionCongenital Heart DefectEncephalitisPolioMedicineAnimal Virus
Coxsackie virus group B type 4 caused two fatal generalized neonatal infections. The study reviewed clinical and pathological features of 25 cases of this disorder. High‑titer virus was found in myocardial, spinal cord, and liver tissues, indicating intrauterine infection, and inoculation into newborn mice produced acute anterior‑horn destruction indistinguishable from poliomyelitis.
Two fatal cases of generalized infection in the neonatal period with Coxsackie virus, Group B, Type 4 were studied. The virus was present in high titer in the myocardial tissue of both infants and recovered as well from the spinal cord and liver of one. In the latter case, the infection was acquired in utero as indicated by the onset of illness at 13 hours of age and death at 36 hours. Both virus strains, when inoculated into newborn mice, produced acute destruction of the anterior horns of the spinal cord, indistinguishable from that induced by poliomyelitis virus. The clinical and pathologic features in 25 cases of this disorder are reviewed.