78 Neurosciences 2012; Vol. 17 (1) An adult patient with rubella encephalitis Evangelia Giza, MD, PhD, Styliani Karachristianou, MD, PhD, Emmanouel Roilides, MD, PhD, Athanasia Anastasiou, MD, PhD. E ncephalitis is a complex and severe neurological syndrome and the identifcation of its etiologic agents is useful to determine the treatment strategy and anticipate the illness course. However, according to many studies, the etiologic agent was not identifed in 48-63% of encephalitis’ cases. 1 Rubella is a rare etiologic agent, causing encephalitis only in one in 5000-6000 cases during previous epidemics. 2 Rubella encephalitis (RE) almost always occurs in unvaccinated children and accounts for 2.9-7.4% of childhood encephalitis according to recent studies, even though rubella has become very rare after universal childhood vaccination. 3 We present an uncommon case of RE in an immunocompetent unvaccinated adult patient to highlight the likelihood of its occurrence in the adult population even without clinical evidence of rubella infection. A 65-year-old man who presented with fever (temperature up to 39 o C), vomiting, and drowsiness during the previous 10 days was admitted to the Neurological Department. On neurological examination the patient was in a lethargic condition, able to utter words only occasionally and follow simple commands, while he opened his eyes and had a fexing motion after a painful stimulus. Tere were neither focal neurological signs nor neck stifness, and his recent medical history was free of any symptoms and signs of infection. Routine laboratory data, ECG, and x-rays of the chest were all normal. Te CSF analysis was as follows: cells 10/mm 3 (lymphocytic cell profle), protein 60mg/dl, glucose 55mg/dl, while CSF culture for common bacteria, cocci and fungi were negative. Te EEG showed generalized high-amplitude θ and δ activities, predominantly in the frontal areas. Cranial MRI revealed focal areas of high signal intensity on FLAIR and T2-weighed images with indistinct margins, close to the lateral ventricles, in the frontal lobes, corpus callosum, and the white matter of temporoparietal region (Figure 1). Te T1-weighed MRI image after gadolinium demonstrated difuse heterogeneous enhancement of the lesions. Tese fndings were compatible with difused parenchymal encephalitis. Specifc IgM antibodies for Ebstein-Barr virus, cytomegalovirus, herpes simplex virus type 1 and 2, coxsackie, varicella zoster virus, adenovirus, Toxoplasma gondii, Borrelia burgdorferi, Mycoplasma pneumoniae, Listeria monocytogenes, Brucella, Candida albicans, Aspergillus fumigatus, and Cryptococcus neoformans using an ELISA technique were not detected in the serum and CSF. Gene probe for tuberculosis was also negative in the serum and CSF. In contrast, the ELISA revealed that titers of Rubella specifc IgM and IgG antibodies in serum were 33.6 (0-20 IU/ml), 178 (0-9 IU/ml). Both were negative in the CSF. Rubella RNA was not isolated in the serum or in the CSF using polymerase chain reaction. Later, rubella IgM antibody serum titers showed a signifcant reduction; 26.7 on the ffteenth day, and 15.7 on the thirtieth day, while IgG antibody serum titers increased: 256 on the ffteenth day, and 261 on the thirtieth day. Initially, the patient was treated with dexamethasone and acyclovir and after the serologic results we stopped acyclovir and followed symptomatic therapy. Twenty days after admission his fever and vomiting remitted, but the level of consciousness remained unchanged. Te CSF, EEG, and MRI examinations were repeated and showed no signifcant change. Tree months later the patient died of severe nosocomial infections. In this report we present a case of RE in an adult, unvaccinated for rubella. Tis diagnosis was confrmed by the identifcation of positive IgM antibodies against rubella in serum, the progressive reduction of these titers in sequential measurements, and the parallel increase of IgG antibody titers, even though there was no evidence of recent rubella infection. 2,3 Encephalitis is a rare complication of rubella infection and usually occurs in unvaccinated children as mentioned above. Only few Clinical Note Disclosure. Te authors declare no conficting interests. Figure 1 - Axial fuid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) MRI showing high signal intensity areas with indistinct margins in the white matter of left temporal region. Adult20110378 78 1/10/12 3:21:32 PM