ST. PETE BEACH, FLA. — Typical primary effects of parvovirus B19 infection during pregnancy include hydrops fetalis, fetal death, and spontaneous abortion, but a recent case and a review of the literature suggest that central nervous system abnormalities are a rare but possible effect of such infection, Dr. Kenneth Lyon Jones reported at the annual meeting of the Teratology Society.
Dr. Jones' case involved an 11-year-old boy whose mother had documented parvovirus B19 infection early in her first trimester. The child had severe brain development defects secondary to the prenatal exposure. Mental retardation was severe; he had not learned to speak and had been diagnosed with hypertonic cerebral palsy.
Diagnosis of maternal infection was made during the first trimester. An ultrasound at 20.5 weeks' gestation indicated fetal ventricular enlargement, and at birth the boy weighed 2,898 g. At day 5 he received a blood transfusion because he had severe anemia, said Dr. Jones of the University of California, San Diego.
During the newborn period, ultrasound showed severe cerebral atrophy.
At age 11, his height was 122 cm (below the 3rd percentile) and his weight was 27.3 kg (10th percentile).
The child was markedly hirsute and had a frontal hair upsweep, a large hemangioma over the helix of his right ear, a large space between his upper central incisors, and clinodactyly of the index and fifth fingers of his left hand, Dr. Jones noted.
In addition, his inner canthal distance was 2.7 cm (25th percentile), and his palpebral fissure was 2.3 cm (below the 2nd percentile).
Valproic acid and carbamazepine treatment failed to control seizures, which he began having at birth.
A search of the literature revealed three publications documenting CNS abnormalities after maternal parvovirus B19 infection, Dr. Jones said.
The first, which was published as an abstract, involved three cases. In one case the fetus died, and in the other two cases the fetuses survived but had severe mental retardation.
Neuropathology at the time of death in the nonsurviving fetus, which was exposed to infection at 24 weeks' gestation, showed brain atrophy with widespread dysplasia and focal destruction of spinal cord and piriform cells, among other abnormal findings noted Dr. Jones.
One of the survivors was exposed to infection at 18 weeks' gestation. The child had cerebral palsy, developmental delay, and infantile spasms. Neuroimaging revealed enlarged ventricles with small periventricular calcifications, cortical dysplasia with polymicrogyria, and periventricular hypodensity.
The final case in that report involved a fetus exposed at 23 weeks' gestation. A CT scan of the brain revealed periventricular calcifications.
The second publication was a case report involving a fetus that was exposed at 15 weeks' gestation and died 7 hours after birth. Neuropathology showed multinucleated giant cells, macrophages, microglia, and many small calcifications around the vessels, predominantly in the cerebral white matter. Polymerase chain reaction amplification showed that parvovirus DNA was present in the nuclei of the multinucleated giant cells and endothelial cells, Dr. Jones said.
The final publication involved a series of 92 consecutive singleton pregnancies with serologic evidence of parvovirus B19 infection. There were 3 therapeutic abortions, 64 fetal deaths, 10 premature births (8 of the babies subsequently died), and 15 term births (1 baby subsequently died).
Of the 73 fetal or neonatal deaths, 21 had adequate histologic evaluation of the brain, and 9 of these showed CNS abnormalities. Of the 16 surviving babies, 5 had CNS abnormalities.
One of the 14 with CNS abnormalities had trisomy 13 syndrome; no etiology was determined in the remaining cases, but the findings suggested anemia might be an important mechanism for CNS abnormalities, Dr. Jones noted.
Based on the findings of the published reports, it appears three patterns of abnormalities are associated with maternal parvovirus B19 infection: positional limb deformities, radiographic evidence of intercranial calcifications, and dysplastic changes, including agyria, macrogyria, polymicrogyria, and dysgenesis of the corpus callosum, he said.
“CNS involvement is a rare occurrence following maternal parvovirus infection, but it clearly occurs, and when it does, it's clearly significant,” Dr. Jones said, noting that the mechanism of action most likely includes both infection of cells in the central nervous system and hypoxia secondary to severe anemia.
It is possible that subtle neurobehavioral effects in otherwise normal children result from a mild case of maternal parvovirus B19 infection, he added.