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Arteritis and Large Vessel Occlusive Strokes in Children After COVID-19 Infection
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Arteritis and Large Vessel Occlusive Strokes in Children After COVID-19 Infection

Brian Appavu, Doris Deng, Michael Morgan Dowling, Shipra Garg, Tara Mangum, Varina Boerwinkle and Todd Abruzzo
Pediatrics (Evanston), Vol.147(3), pp.6262-6266
03/01/2021
PMID: 33277353

Abstract

Adolescent Anemia, Iron-Deficiency - complications Anemia, Iron-Deficiency - therapy Arteritis - diagnostic imaging Arteritis - etiology Blood Transfusion Child COVID-19 - complications Female Humans Male Middle Cerebral Artery - diagnostic imaging Middle Cerebral Artery - surgery SARS-CoV-2 Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome - complications Thrombectomy Thrombotic Stroke - diagnostic imaging Thrombotic Stroke - etiology Thrombotic Stroke - surgery
We describe 2 previously healthy children who suffered disabling arterial ischemic strokes because of acute intracranial large vessel occlusion within 3 to 4 weeks of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infection. Both children presented from communities with high COVID-19 case rates in the Southwest United States. An 8-year-old American Indian girl experienced severe iron deficiency anemia requiring blood transfusion and presented with bilateral middle cerebral artery (MCA) distribution strokes 3 weeks later. She underwent emergent mechanical thrombectomy of the left MCA with successful clot retrieval but experienced reocclusion of that artery 5 hours after intervention. She also had evidence of cerebral arteritis on catheter angiography and vessel wall imaging, and clot pathology revealed recently formed, unorganized platelet- and fibrin-rich thrombus with sparse clusters of erythrocytes, degenerated histiocytes, few eosinophils, and rare neutrophils. A 16-year old African American boy demonstrated evidence of arteritis on brain magnetic resonance angiography and serological markers of cardiac and renal injury accompanied by positive lupus anticoagulant antibodies. The children described in this report express clinical features inconsistent with focal cerebral arteriopathy, including elevated markers of systemic inflammation in both bilateral MCA strokes in one case and multiple organ system dysfunction in the other case. Neither patient fulfilled criteria for multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children, given absence of fever. These cases illustrate that systemic postinfectious arteritis with cerebrovascular involvement may complicate COVID-19 infection in previously healthy school-aged children, and their presentations may overlap but not fulfill criteria for multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children or focal cerebral arteriopathy.

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