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Abstract Details

Immune-mediated Neurological Syndromes Following Neurotropic Viral Infections: Clinical, Immunopathological, and Therapeutic Insights
Infectious Disease
P7 - Poster Session 7 (8:00 AM-9:00 AM)
3-008
To compare current evidence on neuro-immunological syndromes associated with neurotropic viruses: Herpes simplex virus(HSV), Cytomegalovirus(CMV), Rabies virus, and Zika virus - focusing on clinical manifestations, immunopathogenesis, diagnostic challenges, and therapeutic implications.

Neurotropic viruses are well-established causes of direct viral encephalitis. Emerging evidence reveals that many CNS complications following these infections are immune-mediated rather than virally driven. Guillain-Barré syndrome(GBS), acute disseminated encephalomyelitis(ADEM), and autoimmune encephalitis(AE) have been increasingly recognized in association with viral infections. Understanding these syndromes is critical for differentiating post-infectious immune phenomena from active viral disease, guiding appropriate further immunotherapy versus antiviral therapy.



A narrative comparative review was conducted using PubMed, Scopus, and Embase databases(2000–2025). Studies linking neurotropic viruses to immune-mediated CNS syndromes(GBS, ADEM, AE) were included. Articles describing direct viral encephalitis without immune mediation were excluded. Clinical features, immune mechanisms, and management approaches were systematically compared.

We identified a convergent pattern of post-infectious, antibody-mediated neuroinflammation across multiple neurotropic viruses.

For HSV, immune-mediated relapses (anti-NMDAR autoimmune encephalitis) were reported in ~10–25% of patients recovering from HSV-1 encephalitis, typically emerging 2–12 weeks after the acute illness.

CMV is implicated in GBS and immune-reconstitution syndromes, particularly in immunocompromised recipients.

Zika virus shows the most robust epidemiologic link to GBS and ADEM: published outbreak analyses and modeling estimated ~0.2–2.4 GBS cases/10,000 Zika infections, and multiple case-control studies have detected anti-ganglioside antibodies more often in Zika-associated GBS patients than in infected controls, supporting molecular-mimicry–driven axonal injury.

Rabies-associated autoimmune-like syndromes remain rare and are principally reported after vaccination or abortive infections in isolated case reports; quantitative incidence data are lacking.

Immune-mediated neurological syndromes represent an under-recognized, clinically significant spectrum of post-viral complications. Differentiating them from direct viral encephalitis is essential for timely IVIG, plasmapheresis, or corticosteroids. Syndrome recognition enhances diagnostic accuracy, improves patient outcomes, and informs future research on neuro-immune interactions and vaccine safety.

Authors/Disclosures
Suchita Mylavarapu, MBBS
PRESENTER
Dr. Mylavarapu has nothing to disclose.
Amritaa R. Thalla, MD, MBBS Dr. Thalla has nothing to disclose.
Aadhiti Kandula, MBBS Ms. Kandula has nothing to disclose.
Sai Lavanya Patnala, MBBS (Apollo Institute of Medical Sciences and Research, Hyderabad) Ms. Patnala has nothing to disclose.
Meghana Chennupati, MBBS Miss Chennupati has nothing to disclose.
Shreya R. Goranti IV, MBBS Ms. Goranti has nothing to disclose.
Tarun Kumar Suvvari, MBBS Dr. Suvvari has nothing to disclose.
Venkataramana Kandi Venkataramana Kandi has nothing to disclose.