Background: Human enteroviruses (HEVs) are the most common viral pathogen associated with paediatric aseptic meningitis. From October 2010 to February 2011 a cluster of HEV-associated meningitis cases was identified in paediatric patients who had presented at two large tertiary hospitals in Pretoria in the Tshwane Metropolitan Area, Gauteng, South Africa (SA).
Objectives: The aim of this study was to review the clinical features and to characterise the HEV strains associated with this cluster of meningitis cases.
Study design: In this retrospective study HEVs, detected by real time reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction in acute phase cerebrospinal fluid specimens from 30 patients with aseptic meningitis, were characterised and the clinical presentations of these patients were described.
Results: Fever (83%), headache (70%) and vomiting (67%) were the most prominent symptoms with signs of meningeal irritation recorded in 67% of the patients. There was a neutrophil predominance in the cerebrospinal fluid of 57% of the patients with pleocytosis. Based on partial nucleotide sequence analysis of the HEV viral protein 1 gene, echovirus (E) serotype 4 (E-4) was identified in 80% (24/30) of specimens with E-9 (3/30) and coxsackie virus B5 (1/30) detected less frequently.
Conclusion: In this cluster of aseptic meningitis cases E-4 was the predominant strain with E-9, and to a lesser extent other HEVs, identified less frequently.
Keywords: Aseptic meningitis; Cerebrospinal fluid; Echovirus type 4; Real-time RT-PCR; South Africa.
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