Neuronal infection is a major pathogenetic mechanism and cause of fatalities in human acute Nipah virus encephalitis

Acute Nipah (NiV) encephalitis is characterised by a dual pathogenetic mechanism of neuroglial infection and ischaemia-microinfarction associated with vasculitis-induced thrombotic occlusion. We investigated the contributions of these two mechanisms in fatal cases. Materials and methods We analysed...

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Main Authors: Ong, Kien Chai, Ng, Khong Ying, Ng, Chiu Wan, Tan, Soon Hao, Teo, Woon Li, Karim, Norain, Kumar, Shalini, Wong, Kum Thong
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Published: Wiley 2022
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/41438/
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spelling my.um.eprints.414382023-09-22T07:06:42Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/41438/ Neuronal infection is a major pathogenetic mechanism and cause of fatalities in human acute Nipah virus encephalitis Ong, Kien Chai Ng, Khong Ying Ng, Chiu Wan Tan, Soon Hao Teo, Woon Li Karim, Norain Kumar, Shalini Wong, Kum Thong R Medicine RB Pathology Acute Nipah (NiV) encephalitis is characterised by a dual pathogenetic mechanism of neuroglial infection and ischaemia-microinfarction associated with vasculitis-induced thrombotic occlusion. We investigated the contributions of these two mechanisms in fatal cases. Materials and methods We analysed brain tissues (cerebrum, brainstem and cerebellum) from 15 autopsies using light microscopy, immunohistochemistry (IHC), in situ hybridisation and quantitative methods. Results Three types of discrete plaque-like parenchymal lesions were identified: Type 1 with neuroglial IHC positivity for viral antigens and minimal or no necrosis; Type 2 with neuroglial immunopositivity and necrosis; and Type 3 with necrosis but no viral antigens. Most viral antigen/RNA-positive cells were neurons. Cerebral glial immunopositivity was rare, suggesting that microinfarction played a more important role in white matter injury. Type 1 lesions were also detected in the brainstem and cerebellum, but the differences between cerebral cortex and these two regions were not statistically significant. In the cerebral cortex, Type 1 lesions overwhelmingly predominated, and only 14% Type 1 vs 69% Type 2 lesions were associated with thrombosis. This suggests that neuronal infection as a mechanism of pathogenesis was more important than microinfarction, both in general and in Type 1 lesions in particular. Between the `early' group (<8-day fever) and the `late' group (>= 8-day fever), there was a decrease of Type 1 and Type 2 lesions with a concomitant increase of Type 3 lesions, suggesting the latter possibly represented late-stage microinfarction and/or neuronal infection. Conclusion Neuronal infection appears to play a more important role than vasculopathy-induced microinfarction in acute NiV encephalitis. Wiley 2022-10 Article PeerReviewed Ong, Kien Chai and Ng, Khong Ying and Ng, Chiu Wan and Tan, Soon Hao and Teo, Woon Li and Karim, Norain and Kumar, Shalini and Wong, Kum Thong (2022) Neuronal infection is a major pathogenetic mechanism and cause of fatalities in human acute Nipah virus encephalitis. Neuropathology and Applied Neurobiology, 48 (6). ISSN 0309-0167,
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic R Medicine
RB Pathology
spellingShingle R Medicine
RB Pathology
Ong, Kien Chai
Ng, Khong Ying
Ng, Chiu Wan
Tan, Soon Hao
Teo, Woon Li
Karim, Norain
Kumar, Shalini
Wong, Kum Thong
Neuronal infection is a major pathogenetic mechanism and cause of fatalities in human acute Nipah virus encephalitis
description Acute Nipah (NiV) encephalitis is characterised by a dual pathogenetic mechanism of neuroglial infection and ischaemia-microinfarction associated with vasculitis-induced thrombotic occlusion. We investigated the contributions of these two mechanisms in fatal cases. Materials and methods We analysed brain tissues (cerebrum, brainstem and cerebellum) from 15 autopsies using light microscopy, immunohistochemistry (IHC), in situ hybridisation and quantitative methods. Results Three types of discrete plaque-like parenchymal lesions were identified: Type 1 with neuroglial IHC positivity for viral antigens and minimal or no necrosis; Type 2 with neuroglial immunopositivity and necrosis; and Type 3 with necrosis but no viral antigens. Most viral antigen/RNA-positive cells were neurons. Cerebral glial immunopositivity was rare, suggesting that microinfarction played a more important role in white matter injury. Type 1 lesions were also detected in the brainstem and cerebellum, but the differences between cerebral cortex and these two regions were not statistically significant. In the cerebral cortex, Type 1 lesions overwhelmingly predominated, and only 14% Type 1 vs 69% Type 2 lesions were associated with thrombosis. This suggests that neuronal infection as a mechanism of pathogenesis was more important than microinfarction, both in general and in Type 1 lesions in particular. Between the `early' group (<8-day fever) and the `late' group (>= 8-day fever), there was a decrease of Type 1 and Type 2 lesions with a concomitant increase of Type 3 lesions, suggesting the latter possibly represented late-stage microinfarction and/or neuronal infection. Conclusion Neuronal infection appears to play a more important role than vasculopathy-induced microinfarction in acute NiV encephalitis.
format Article
author Ong, Kien Chai
Ng, Khong Ying
Ng, Chiu Wan
Tan, Soon Hao
Teo, Woon Li
Karim, Norain
Kumar, Shalini
Wong, Kum Thong
author_facet Ong, Kien Chai
Ng, Khong Ying
Ng, Chiu Wan
Tan, Soon Hao
Teo, Woon Li
Karim, Norain
Kumar, Shalini
Wong, Kum Thong
author_sort Ong, Kien Chai
title Neuronal infection is a major pathogenetic mechanism and cause of fatalities in human acute Nipah virus encephalitis
title_short Neuronal infection is a major pathogenetic mechanism and cause of fatalities in human acute Nipah virus encephalitis
title_full Neuronal infection is a major pathogenetic mechanism and cause of fatalities in human acute Nipah virus encephalitis
title_fullStr Neuronal infection is a major pathogenetic mechanism and cause of fatalities in human acute Nipah virus encephalitis
title_full_unstemmed Neuronal infection is a major pathogenetic mechanism and cause of fatalities in human acute Nipah virus encephalitis
title_sort neuronal infection is a major pathogenetic mechanism and cause of fatalities in human acute nipah virus encephalitis
publisher Wiley
publishDate 2022
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/41438/
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