Clinical, laboratory aspects and therapy response of patients with a rare complication of the EBV infection

Abstract


Mehmet Akın*,

Primary Epstein-Barr virus infection in children is usually asymptomatic, but some children or young adults manifest infectious mononucleosis with typical symptoms of fever, pharyngitis, lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly and a typical lymphocytosis. The infection caused by Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV) can be followed by immunological complications. One of these is autoimmune hemolytic anemia (AIHA) that it is rare but well known ~1:1000 patients with infectious mononucleosis. Two male patients, aged 2 and 2.5 years old with autoimmune hemolytic anemia caused by Epstein-Barr virus admitted to our hospital with pallor, palpitation, fever and scleral icterus. Viral capsid antigen -IgM was positive in both cases, indicating the presence of primary Epstein-Barr virus infection. AIHA risk of EBV infection in the first two weeks might be considered closely because of life threatining complications such as autoimmune hemolytic anemia.

Share this article

Awards Nomination

Select your language of interest to view the total content in your interested language

Indexed In
  • Index Copernicus
  • Genamics JournalSeek
  • Open Academic Journals Index (OAJI)
  • OCLC- WorldCat
  • Academic Resource Index