Abdel-Mannan et al., 2020
|
United Kingdom
|
Case Series
|
March 1, 2020 to May 8, 2020
|
N = 50
● 27 with Pediatric Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome (MIS)
● Sex (%F/%M): 50 (n = 25) /50 (n = 25)
|
N = 4
|
● Age Range: < 18 years
● Median Age: 12 (range, 8–15) years
|
● COVID-19: QRT-PCR (Nasopharyngeal Swab) or SARS-CoV-2 IgG (Serology)
● Neurological Changes: MRI
|
● Neurological Involvement: 8% (n = 4)
* MIS: 14.8% (n = 4 of 27)
- Brainstem signs with dysarthria or dysphagia (n = 2), cerebellar ataxia (n = 1), encephalopathy (n = 4), headache (n = 3), and meningism (n = 1)
- Peripheral nervous system (PNS) involvement with global proximal muscle weakness (n = 4) and reduced reflexes (n = 2)
− 45.1% (n = 23 of 50 pediatric and adolescent patients experienced neurological symptoms related to cytokine storms
● Brain CT/MRI Findings:
* Signal changes in the splenium of the corpus callosum (n = 4)
- Patient 1 (CT scan): hypodensity of the splenium of the corpus callosum
- Patient 2 (MRI): signal changes of the genu and SCC & bilateral centrum semiovale with restricted diffusion
- Patient 3 (MRI): hyperintensities with restricted diffusion in the SCC and bilateral
centrum semiovale
- Patient 4 (MRI): signal changes in SCC with mild restricted diffusion
|
Aljomah et al., 2021
|
Saudi Arabia
|
Case Series
|
May 23, 2020 to June 30, 2020
|
N = 6
|
N = 5
|
● Age Range: Newborn-10 years
● Sex: 1 female
|
● COVID-19: QRT-PCR (Nasopharyngeal Swab)
● Neurological Changes: CSF analysis, EEG, and Brain & Spine MRI
|
● Neurological Involvement: 83% (n = 5)
* Case 1: dysarthria and gait instability followed by double vision and ophthalmoplegia (developed Miller Fisher syndrome)
* Case 2: fever and seizure
* Case 3: headache and papilledema
* Case 4: abnormal MRI findings (and congenital heart disease)
* Case 5: history of abnormal movement post-sleep
Note that cases 4 and 5 had neurological findings not necessarily related to the virus that was discovered by incidence due to active screening.
● Neuroimaging Findings:
Spine MRI
* Case 1: thickening and enhancement of the nerve roots of the cauda equina and conus medullaris, with no acute intracranial pathology
Brain MRI
* Case 4: rotated vermis and hypoplastic corpus callosum
|
Dilber et al., 2021
|
Turkey
|
Retrospective Observational
|
March 11, 2020 to January 30, 2021
|
N = 382
● Sex (%F/%M): 49.2 (n = 188)/50.8 (n = 194)
|
N = 259
|
● Mean Age: 7.14 ± 5.84 years
● Median Age: (range, 0–17) years
|
● COVID-19: QRT-PCR (Nasopharyngeal Swab), either with a positive result for IgG or IgM antibodies against SARS-CoV-2
|
● Neurological Involvement: 68% (n = 259)
Hospitalization: 8.9% (n = 34)
* Seizure: 52.9% (n = 18)
* Headache: 38.2% (n = 13)
* Dizziness: 8.8% (n = 3)
* Meningoencephalitis: 5.8% (n = 2)
* Increased frequency of seizures: 1.3% (n = 5)
Outpatient: 58.9% (n = 225)
* Headache: 23% (n = 88)
* Dizziness: 14.3% (n = 55)
* Anosmia: 10.2% (n = 39)
* Ageusia/dysgeusia: 7.3% (n = 28)
● Cranial MRI Findings:
* Case 1: meningoencephalitis
* Case 2: meningoencephalitis
* Severely symptomatic children who received inpatient care: normal
|
Caro-Domínguez et al., 2021
|
France, Iran, Mexico, Peru, Spain, and Switzerland
|
Retrospective Observational
|
May 26, 2020 to June 21, 2020
|
N = 37
|
N = 37
● 12 (32%) patients with Pediatric MIS needed brain imaging (9 MRI and 3 CT)
|
● Age Range: 3 months-15.8 years
● Sex (%F/%M): 43 (n = 16) /56 (n = 21)
|
● COVID-19: PCR Test in 15/37 (41%) or SARS-CoV-2 IgG (Serology) in 13/19 (68%)
● Neurological Changes: CT (3/12) and MRI (9/12)
|
● Neurological Involvement:
* MIS: 100% (n = 37)
* Fever (n = 37, 100%), abdominal pain (n = 25, 68%), conjunctivitis (n = 14, 38%), cough (n = 12, 32%), and rash (n = 20, 54%)
● Brain Imaging Findings (n = 12):
* Abnormal findings: 25% (n = 3 of 12)
* Leptomeningeal enhancement of the right precentral sulcus (n = 1)
* Foci of restricted diffusion in the splenium of the corpus callosum (n = 1)
* Generalized atrophy of the cerebrum with decreased volume and abnormal signal of the white matter (n = 1)
- Most likely related to her cardiac disease rather than COVID-19
|
Fenlon III et al., 2021
|
United States
|
Retrospective Observational
|
April 1, 2020 to July 31, 2020
|
N = 39 (includes up to age 20)
● Sex (%F/%M):
53 (n = 25)/47 (n = 22)
|
N = 4 patients (9%) with brain MRI
|
● Mean Age: 8.4 (range, 1.3–20) years
|
● COVID-19: RT-PCR (Nasopharyngeal Swab) or SARS-CoV-2 IgG (Serology), or both
|
● Brain MRI Findings:
* Parieto-occipital cortical abnormality, possible PRES (n = 1)
* Papilledema (n = 1)
* Normal (n = 2)
* Headache (n = 1)
|
Hatipoglu et al., 2020
|
Turkey
|
Case Report
|
April 2020
|
N = 3
|
N = 3
|
● Age: 13, 13, and 13 years old
● Sex: male, male, and female, respectively
|
● COVID-19: RT-PCR (Throat and Nasopharyngeal Saliva)
|
● Smell and/or taste disorder developed without nasal symptoms (nasal congestion, nasal obstruction, or rhinorrhea)
● Brain MRI Findings (n = 3):
* Case 1: no signal change or contrast material uptake was observed in the olfactory bulb; headache
* Case 2: no anomalies of the olfactory bulbs and tracts
* Case 3: no pathological imaging finding in the olfactory region; headache; weakness
|
Khan et al, 2021
|
India
|
Case Series
|
N/A
|
N = 3
|
N = 3
|
● Age: 11, 7, and 15 years old
● Sex: male, female, and female, respectively
|
● COVID-19: SARS-CoV-2 IgG (Serology)
|
● Brain CE-MRI Findings:
* Case 1: acute cerebellitis; headache; seizure
* Case 2: encephalomyelitis
* Case 3: arterial ischemic stroke
- Small hypodense area involving subcortical white matter in the right frontal lobe suggestive of infarct and a small intracerebral hematoma in left frontal lobe with mild perilesional edema; headache; seizure
Note: on follow-up visits, no cases had any neurological deficits
|
Krueger et al., 2021
|
Brazil
|
Case Series
|
N/A
|
N = 4
|
N = 4
|
● Age: 16 years, 15 years, 5 years, 2 months old
● Sex: female, male, female, male, respectively
|
● COVID-19: RT-qPCR
|
● Case 1:
* Brain MRI Findings: contrast enhancement in the anterior roots of the medullary cone and bilateral cranial
* Sensory and motor polyradiculopathy with RT-qPCR for COVID-19 and dengue both detected in CSF that improved after appropriate treatment
● Case 2:
* Normal brain MRI findings
* Guillain-Barre syndrome that improved after using human immunoglobulin
* Weakness
● Case 3:
* Normal brain MRI findings
* Acute intracranial hypertension that improved with lumbar puncture and using acetazolamide
* Headache
● Case 4:
* Normal brain MRI findings
* Focal epileptic seizures that recovered after antiepileptic treatment
|
LaRovere et al., 2021
|
United States
|
Retrospective Observational
|
March 15, 2020 to December 15, 2020
|
N = 1695
● Sex (%F/%M): 46 (n = 786)/54 (n = 909)
|
N = 365
|
● Age Range: < 21 years
● Median Age: 9.1 (interquartile range, 2.4–15.3) years
|
● COVID-19: RT-PCR and symptoms associated with acute COVID-19 or met US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention criteria for MIS-C
|
● Neurological Involvement: 22% (n = 365)
* Patients with underlying neurologic disorders experiencing neurological involvement (n = 81 of 365, 22%)
* Patients without underlying neurologic disorders experiencing neurological involvement (n = 113 of 1330, 8%)
* Patients who were previously healthy (53%, n = 195 vs 54%, n = 723) and met criteria for MIS (35%, n = 126 vs 37%, n = 490)
* Patients experiencing neurologic involvement:
− 88% (n = 322) had transient symptoms and survived
− 12% (n = 43) had life-threatening conditions associated with COVID-19:
• Severe encephalopathy (n = 15; 5 with splenial lesions)
• Stroke (n = 12)
• ADEM (n = 8)
• Guillain-Barre syndrome/variants (n = 4)
• Acute motor-sensory axonal neuropathy (n = 1)
• Acute fulminant cerebral edema (n = 4)
● Head CT performed (n = 63)
● Brain MRI Findings (n = 54):
* MIS-C: Patients who were previously healthy with diffuse abnormal T2 hyperintensities and reduced diffusivity involving the white matter and
genu/splenium of the corpus callosum (n = 5)
- Severe encephalopathy, focal neurologic deficits, and visual hallucinations (n = 4 of 5)
* Meningoencephalitis (ADEM-like) (n = 1)
* Acute arterial ischemic stroke (n = 1)
* Acute hemorrhagic stroke (n = 1)
* Guillain-Barre syndrome (n = 1)
* Acute fulminant cerebral edema (n = 1)
* Encephalitis (n = 1)
* Severe encephalopathy (n = 1)
* Cerebral venous sinus thrombosis (n = 1)
|
Lindan et al., 2021
|
Argentina, Brazil, France, India, UK, US, Peru, and Saudi Arabia
|
Case Series
|
April 30, 2020 to Sept 8, 2020
|
N = 38
|
N = 38
|
● Sex (%F/%M): 45 (n = 17)/55 (n = 21)
|
● COVID-19: PCR test of upper respiratory tract, SARS-CoV-2 IgM (Serology), and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) analysis
|
● Neurological Involvement: 100% (n = 38)
* Resembled an immune-mediated parainfectious pattern of disease involving the brain, spine, cranial nerves, and nerve roots: 65% (n = 13 of 20) patients in categories 1 and 2 or 74% (n = 28 of 38) patients in all categories
● Brain MRI Findings:
Category 1: Acute COVID-19: 32% (n = 12)
* Autoimmune manifestations: 50% (n = 6)
- ADEM-like imaging pattern: 33% (n = 4)
- Neuritis: 17% (n = 2)
* Aggressive myelitis: 8% (n = 1)
* Small left frontal infarct: 8% (n = 1)
* Acute encephalopathy and fever: 8% (n = 1)
* Choroid plexitis and fulminant CNS tuberculosis with ventriculitis, hydrocephalus, and focal cerebral abscesses: 8% (n = 1)
* Meningitis, inflammatory vasculitis, and multiple infarcts in the setting of sepsis: 8% (n = 1)
Category 2: Asymptomatic Acute or Subacute COVID-19: 21% (n = 8)
* ADEM-like brain changes and long-segment central cord myelitis: 25% (n = 2)
* ADEM-like brain changes and anti-N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (anti-NMDAR) autoimmune encephalitis: 13% (n = 1)
* Long-segment central cord myelitis: 13% (n = 1)
* Neuritis: 50% (n = 4)
- ADEM-like changes and myelitis (n = 1 of 4)
* Extensive superior sagittal sinus thrombosis with parasagittal venous infarcts: 13% (n = 1)
Category 3: MIS-C: 29% (n = 11)
* Splenial lesions of the corpus callosum in isolation or in combination with other brain abnormalities: 64% (n = 7)
* ADEM-like brain changes: 64% (n = 7)
* Cranial nerve enhancement: 18% (n = 2)
* Cauda equina enhancement: 9% (n = 1)
* Myelitis: 9% (n = 1)
* Multiple punctate foci of susceptibility-induced signal drop-out in the brain, consistent with microthrombi: 9% (n = 1)
* Enhancing myositis of the facial or neck musculature: 36% (n = 4)
Category 4: Indeterminate: 18% (n = 7)
* Neuritis: 71% (n = 4)
* ADEM-like brain changes: 29% (n = 2)
- Myelitis (n = 1 of 2)
- Antimyelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG) antibodies (n = 1 of 2)
* Cerebellitis and cranial neuritis: 14% (n = 1)
* Vasculitis and a midbrain infarct unrelated to a co-infection: 14% (n = 1)
|
Mihai et al., 2022
|
Romania
|
Retrospective, Observational, Descriptive Study
|
August 2020 and May 2021
|
N = 30
|
N = 14 (with MIS-C)
|
● Sex (%F/%M): 29 (n = 4)/71 (n = 10)
|
● COVID-19: nasopharyngeal swab
|
● Neurological Involvement: 46.7% (n = 14)
* Headache (n = 11), ataxia (n = 5), photophobia (n = 5), difficulty walking (n = 4), meningism (n = 9), diplopia (n = 1), new appeared strabismus (n = 1), drowsiness (n = 7), lethargy (n = 5), alteration of consciousness (n = 6), skin hyperaesthesia (n = 6)
● Craniocerebral CT-MRI Findings (n = 1):
* Demyelinating lesions (n = 1)
|
Monrand et al., 2021
|
France
|
Retrospective Case Series
|
February 25 and October 10, 2020
|
N = 661
|
N = 7
|
● Age Range: 10–13 years old
● Mean Age: 12
● Sex (%F/%M): 86 (n = 6)/14 (n = 1)
|
● COVID-19: RT-PCR
|
● Neurological Involvement: 1.06% (n = 7)
* Headache (n = 4)
* Fatigue (n = 5)
● Brain [18F]-FDG PET Findings: a similar brain hypometabolic pattern observed in adult long COVID-19 patients appeared 5 months later
* Patients 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7: involved the bilateral medial temporal lobes (n = 6)
* Patients 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7: brainstem (n = 6)
* All Patients: cerebellum (n = 7)
* Patients 1, 3, 4, 5, 6: involved the right olfactory gyrus after small volume correction (n = 5), with partial PET recovery (n = 2) at follow-up
|
Olivotto et et al., 2021
|
Italy
|
Retrospective Observational
|
October 1, 2020 to February 15, 2021
|
N = 34
|
N = 7
● 4 neuroimaging studies
|
● Age Range: 0–18 years old
● Sex (%F/%M): 57 (n = 4)/43 (n = 3)
|
● COVID-19: Clinical or laboratory evidence of SARS-CoV-2 infection and abnormal neuroimaging findings (MRI or CT)
|
● Neurological Involvement:
* Patients 1–4: severe phenotype
- Severe irritability, mood deflection and drowsiness, variably associated with headache, meningism, photophobia, oculomotor apraxia, gait disorder, pain and slow, “whiny” and repetitive speech with reduced verbal output, and preserved comprehension
- Patient 3: two generalized tonic-clonic seizures during fever
* Patients 5–7: mild phenotype
- Diffuse encephalopathy, namely mild irritability, drowsiness, mood deflection, and headache
● Brain MRI Findings (n = 4):
* Patients 1–4: normal
|
Orman et al., 2021
|
United States
|
Retrospective Observational
|
March 18, 2020 to September 30, 2020
|
N = 3694
● 217 (6.5%) neuroimaging studies
|
N = 20
● 43 neuroimaging studies
|
● Age Range: 0–18 years old
● Sex (Female/Male): 12:8 (n of females = 8; n of males = 12)
|
● COVID-19: PCR test or serum antibodies
|
● Systemic & Neurologic Involvement: 0.54% (n = 20)
* Acute COVID-19: 10% (n = 2)
* No signs of acute pathology: 90% (n = 18)
● Brain MRI Findings (n = 4):
* Patients 1–4: normal
|
Palabikik et al., 2021
|
Turkey
|
Retrospective Observational
|
March 1, 2020 to March 31, 2021
|
N = 45
|
N = 45
|
● Age Range: 52 days–16 years old
● Median Age: 7.68 years
● Sex (%F/%M): 40 (n = 18)/60 (n = 27)
|
● COVID-19: RT-PCR test of upper respiratory tract and serology for SARS-CoV-2 antibodies using blood or CSF samples
|
● Neurological Involvement:
* Reversible splenial lesion syndrome (RESLES): 13% (n = 6, most common)
● Brain MRI Findings (n = 4):
* Patient 1:
- Diffusion restriction in oval form in posterior part of body of corpus callosum in diffusion-weighted sequences
* Patient 2:
- ADEM-like signal changes without diffusion restriction in the cerebellar hemispheres, periaqueductal region, mesencephalon, bilateral hypothalamic region, bilateral thalamus, lentiform nucleus, caudate nucleus and deep white matter, and subcortical area
- Cranial MRI performed 5 days after the seizure: PRES (new pathological signal changes in bilateral parietooccipital region and bilateral frontoparietal region)
* Patient 3:
- ADEM-like pathological signal changes in bilateral symmetrical deep and subcortical white matter
- Necrosis in the parenchyma (follow-up)
- Laminar necrosis and acute hemorrhagic necrotizing encephalomyelitis
* Patient 4: muscle weakness diagnosed with Guillain-Barre syndrome (spinal MRI)
|
Ray et al., 2021
|
United Kingdom
|
Prospective Cohort Study
|
April 2, 2020 and Feb 1, 2021
|
N = 52
|
● N = 27 (52%) were classified into the COVID-19 neurology group
● N = 25 (48%) were classified into the Pediatric Inflammatory Multisystem Syndrome (PIMS-TS) neurology group
● Cerebral or spinal imaging: 92% (n = 48 of 52) patients
* MRI (n = 46)
* CT (n = 11)
− 58% (n = 28) had abnormal scans
|
● Sex (%F/%M): 42 (n = 22)/58 (n = 30)
COVID-19 neurology group:
● Age Range: 1–16 years old
● Mean Age: 9
PIMS-TS neurology group:
● Age Range: 1–17 years old
● Mean Age: 10
|
● COVID-19: positive PCR (respiratory or spinal fluid samples), anti-SARS-CoV-2 IgG (Serology), or both
|
● Neurological Involvement: 52% (n = 27)
COVID-19 Neurology Group (median age: 9 years, range: 1–16 years)
* 52% (n = 14) had encephalopathy:
- Encephalopathy associated with status epilepticus (n = 7): 3 had no pre-existing epilepsy
- Encephalitis (n = 5)
- Isolated encephalopathy (n = 2)
* 48% (n = 13) presented with a recognized neuroimmune disorder:
- GBS (n = 5)
- ADEM (n = 5): 3 had myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG) antibodies
- Other acute demyelinating syndromes (n = 3)
- Autoimmune (limbic) encephalitis (n = 1)
* PNS involvement occurred independently as a separate disorder (GBS in all 5 cases) (n = 10)
* Acute psychosis: 7% (n = 2)
* Chorea: 7% (n = 2)
* Previous basal ganglia stroke and diagnosed with a transient ischemic attack (n = 1)
PIMS-TS Neurology Group (median age: 10 years, range: 1–17 years)
* 88% (n = 22) had encephalopathy
* CNS signs: 24% (n = 6)
- Ataxia (n = 3)
- Hemiplegia associated with hemorrhagic stroke (n = 1)
- Brainstem signs associated with ischemic stroke (n = 1)
- Left hemiplegia associated with ADEM (n = 1)
* ADEM with MOG antibodies: 4% (n = 1)
* PNS involvement was part of the multisystem presentation: 40% (n = 10/25)
* Seizures: 16% (n = 4)
- Focal seizures (n = 3) (status epilepticus, n = 1)
- Subtle motor seizures associated with ongoing subclinical ictal activity (n = 1)
* Behavioral changes: 36% (n = 9)
- Hallucinations (at presentation): 24% (n = 6)
- Headache or meningism: 40% (n = 10)
● Cranial MRI Findings:
PIMS-TS Neurology Group: 74% (n = 17 of 23) patients had abnormal neuroimaging
* Signal changes in the splenium of the corpus callosum consistent with MERS: 28% (n = 7)
* Acute stroke (one ischemic involving the anterior and middle right cerebral artery & one intraparenchymal hemorrhage in the right frontal lobe): 8% (n = 2)
* Bilateral hyperintensities within the claustra due to ADEM: 1% (n = 1)
Image findings for 3 cases (n = 3):
* Patient 1: ADEM
* Patient 2: PIMS-TS, encephalopathy, and MERS
* Patient 3: Guillain-Barre syndrome
COVID-19 Neurology Group: 44% (n = 11 of 25) patients had abnormal neuroimaging
* Diffuse T2 or fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) signal abnormalities of the cerebral white matter or deep gray matter consistent with ADEM (n = 4)
* Abnormal T2 signal involving the hippocampi and cortical diffusion restriction due to limbic encephalitis (n = 1)
* Abnormal T2 signal in the periventricular and infratentorial regions consistent with demyelination in a child with an acute demyelinating syndrome (clinically isolated syndrome) (n = 1)
* Intraorbital segment of the right optic nerve consistent with optic neuritis (n = 1)
* Splenium of the corpus callosum consistent with mild encephalopathy with reversible splenial lesion (MERS) (n = 1)
* Myelitis (extensive intramedullary whole spinal cord abnormal T2 with pre-existing diagnosis of adrenal neuroblastoma) (n = 1)
* Thickening and enhancement of the cauda equina nerve roots supportive of GBS (n = 2)
|
Sa et al., 2021
|
United Kingdom
|
Retrospective Observational (Cross-sectional)
|
March 1, 2020 to June 30, 2020
|
N = 75
● Sex (%F/%M): 33 (n = 25)/67 (n = 50)
|
N = 9
(with MIS-C)
|
● Median Age: 10 years
● Interquartile Range: 7.9 years
|
● COVID-19: RT-PCR (Nasopharyngeal swab) or serology
* Active infection: 33% (n = 3) patients
* Recent infection (negative PCR and positive IgG serology): 33% (n = 3) patients
|
● Neurological Involvement: 12% (n = 9)
* Extensive stroke: 22% (n = 2)
* Splenial lesion: 11% (n = 1)
● Brain CT/MRI Findings (n = 4):
* Patient 6: subtle cortical changes as a possible sequelae of hypoxic event
* Patient 7: acute infarction
* Patient 8: focal diffusion restriction involving the splenium of the corpus callosum and mild signal changes in hippocampal regions
* Patient 9: intraparenchymal hemorrhage and infarction
|
Sandoval et al., 2021
|
Chile
|
Case Series
|
April 1, 2020 to July 14, 2020
|
N = 90
|
N = 13 with new-onset neurologic manifestations
● 5 neuroimaging scans
|
● Age Range: 15 months–17 years old
● Median Age: 6.5 years
● Sex (%F/%M):
61.5 (n = 8)/
38.5 (n = 5)
|
● COVID-19: qPCR assay from a nasopharyngeal swab or by positive serology
|
● Neurological Involvement: 14.4% (n = 13)
* Predominant CNS symptoms: 38% (n = 5)
* Predominant PNS symptoms: 54% (n = 7)
* CNS & PNS symptoms: 54% (n = 7)
* Neurologic symptoms appeared at different times in relation to the infection:
- Concomitant: 30.8% (n = 4)
- Onset a few weeks after the infection was no longer active: 69.2% (n = 9)
- Neurologic symptoms as the only manifestation of the disease: 23% (n = 3)
* Seizures: 23% (n = 3)
* Agitation: 15.4% (n = 2)
* Hallucinations: 7.7% (n = 1)
* Headache: 54% (n = 7)
* Generalized muscle weakness: 61.5% (n = 8)
* Papilledema: 7.7% (n = 1)
* Encephalopathy: 15.4% (n = 2)
* MIS-C: 54% (n = 7)
* GBS: 7.7% (n = 1)
● Brain MRI/CT Findings (n = 5):
* Normal brain CT findings (n = 3)
* Frontal hypodensity by CT (later confirmed as an unenhanced subcortical lesion by MRI) (n = 1)
* Multifocal demyelinating lesions by brain and total-spine MRI (n = 1)
|
Ucan et al., 2022
|
Turkey
|
Retrospective Review
|
August 2020 and March 2021
|
N = 47
● Sex (%F/%M): 45 (n = 21)/55 (n = 26)
|
N = 3 (with MIS-C)
|
● Age Range: 25 months–15 years
● Median Age: 8.6 years
|
● COVID-19: RT-PCR and serology
|
● Neurological Involvement: 6% (n = 3)
* Lethargy, irritability, confusion, encephalopathy, and seizures
● Cranial MRI Findings (n = 3):
* Patient 1: MIS with cerebellar ataxia, eventually improved
- Restricted diffusion & T2 hyperintensity involving the corpus callosum splenium & diagnosed with mild encephalopathy with reversible splenial lesion (MERS)
- Lesion in corpus callosum
(disappeared in the follow-up cranial MRI)
* Patients 2–3: normal
|