PMID: 9661954Nov 20, 1998Paper

Fatal cerebral oedema associated with primary dengue infection

The Journal of Infection
H L JanssenA D Osterhaus

Abstract

Encephalopathy associated with dengue fever is considered to be a rare condition in adults. We describe a patient with a primary dengue infection who, in the absence of overt signs of dengue shock syndrome, died due to progressive cerebral oedema. Autopsy findings demonstrated loss of integrity of cerebral vascular endothelium and involvement of complement activation.

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Citations

Aug 27, 2010·Neurology India·J M K Murthy
May 12, 2006·Neurological Research·Georgette L SuidanAaron J Johnson
Apr 27, 2012·La Presse médicale·Erwan OehlerFrédéric Ghawche
Oct 18, 2005·Journal of Clinical Virology : the Official Publication of the Pan American Society for Clinical Virology·Raymond C S SeetEinar P V Wilder-Smith
Aug 21, 2013·Lancet Neurology·Francisco Javier Carod-ArtalJoaquim Gascón
Aug 1, 2015·BMC Infectious Diseases·Mabel CarabaliValéry Ridde
May 13, 2014·Journal of the Neurological Sciences·Sanjeev Kumar BhoiUsha Kant Misra
Jul 3, 2007·Internal Medicine·Satoshi SuzukiKazuhiko Koike
Aug 2, 2005·Arquivos de neuro-psiquiatria·Maria Lúcia Brito FerreiraSolange Dornelas Mesquita
Dec 15, 2019·Viruses·Feroza BegumUpasana Ray
Aug 2, 2017·International Journal of Molecular Sciences·Robin C Willenbring, Aaron J Johnson
Aug 20, 2019·Journal of Travel Medicine·Scott Halstead, Annelies Wilder-Smith
Aug 28, 2021·Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease·Hisham A ImadTatsuo Shioda

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