Publication | Closed Access
Diseases that mimic herpes simplex encephalitis. Diagnosis, presentation, and outcome. NIAD Collaborative Antiviral Study Group.
205
Citations
12
References
1989
Year
Viral DiagnosticsViral PathogenesisPathologyHerpes Simplex EncephalitisViral PersistenceHerpes Simplex VirusNeurologyNeuropathologyHerpes Simplex Virus VaccinesDiagnostic VirologyNeurovirologyVirologyChronic Viral InfectionEncephalitisClinical Infectious DiseaseBrain TissuePathogenesisHerpesvirusesMedicine
A total of 432 patients underwent brain biopsy for presumptive herpes simplex encephalitis. Three patient groups were identified. The first group, 195 patients (45%), had herpes simplex encephalitis confirmed by the isolation of herpes simplex virus from brain tissue at biopsy (193 patients) or autopsy (2 patients). The second group, 95 patients (22%), had diseases that were identified but that were not caused by herpes simplex virus. Three subgroups were recognized: (1) 38 patients (9%) with treatable disease, (2) 40 patients (9%) with nontreatable but diagnosed viral infection, and (3) 17 patients (4%) with identified diseases neither of viral etiology nor treatable. The third group, 142 patients (33%), remained without a diagnosis. Clinical presentation of patients in the second group was similar to that of those with herpes simplex encephalitis and those without a diagnosis. Patients in the subgroup with nontreatable but diagnosed viral infections had the greatest likelihood of returning to normal.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1