2596
PATHOLOGICAL
AND VIROLOGICAL FINDINGS OF INFLUENZA ASSOCIATED ACUTE ENCEPHALOPATHY IN
JAPANESE CHILDREN Togashi T1, Matsuzono Y2 , Morishima T3
, Narita M4 1Sapporo
City General Hospital, Sapporo, Japan 2Matsuzono Pediatric
Clinic, Sapporo, Japan 3Nagoya University,
Nagoya, Japan 4Sapporo
JR Hospital, Sapporo, Japan Objective: To investigate the etiology of acute
encephalopathy during influenza epidemics in Japanese children. Methods: Post-mortem examination was performed
pathologically and virologically in two patients with this disease who died
with a rapid and fulminant course. Results: Disseminated edema, vascular damage with
subsequent leakage of plasma protein and intravascular formation of
thrombus were observed in the upperpart of spinal cord and in the brain
stem. Interstitial pneumonia was observed in both cases. Intravascular
thrombus formation in the lungs and intestinal destruction were observed in
one case. Influenza virus genome, H3, was detected by PCR in a CSF sample
of one case and influenza-A specific antigen was detected using a
monoclonal antibody against NP polypeptide in the bronchial epithelial
cells of another case. Despite the pathological changes in the spinal cord
and the brain stem, no virus, no virus antigen, no virus genome have been
detected in these materials. Cytokines such as IL-6 and TNF-�� were markedly
elevated in CSF and serum samples of one case. Conclusion: These findings strongly suggest the damage of
the endothelial cells of systemic vessels and the destruction of the
blood-brain barrier with the activation of coagulation system. This must
have resulted in the leakage of plasma protein and the intravascular
formation of thrombus in the brain, and consequently, the patients with
this disease, with or without convultion, fell into coma along with
haemorrhagic diathesis.