Enteroviruses are responsible for over 55 per cent of the viral infections of the central nervous system (CNS) among children, according to a study which could help improve diagnosis of the potentially life-threatening condition.
Although enteroviruses are a group of viruses that cause a number of mild infections, they can cause severe illness if they impact the CNS, said researchers from Mumbai-based iGenetic Diagnostics, which carried out the study.
These viruses are also responsible for diseases like polio, and hand, foot and mouth disease, they said.
CNS is the organ system including the brain and the spinal cord. Its infections are difficult to detect as they can be caused by a variety of pathogens including bacteria, virus, fungi, protozoa and parasites.
"In the human body, the blood-brain barrier usually prevents entry of the pathogens into the nervous system, said Aparna Kotekar, Director, Molecular Genetics at iGenetic Diagnostics.
"However, once this barrier is breached, a CNS infection can result. CNS infections can happen to anyone, but young children are more at risk," said Kotekar, the corresponding author of the study published in the International Journal of Science and Research (IJSR).
CNS panel tests are available today that can diagnose the pathogens in 24 hours, researchers said.
In the study, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples were obtained from 49 paediatric cases with suspected CNS infections. All samples were collected between January 2017 and June 2017.
Multiplexed PCR assays, in the form of a comprehensive panel, were run for 45 pathogens (microbial, viral, fungal and parasitic) on 49 paediatric CSF samples.
Each sample was screened for a variety of pathogens in a parallel multiplex mode to rapidly identify the cause of infection.
The study found that bacteria and viruses cause around 70 per cent of the paediatric CNS disease. Of the 49 CSF samples analysed, 23 cases were positive.
Viral infections accounted for nearly 39.1 per cent whereas bacterial infections accounted for 30.4 per cent of the cases. About 21.70 per cent of the cases reported positive for fungi
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