Background Neuroimaging Histopathology & Immunohistochemistry
BACKGROUND AND CLINICAL INFORMATION:
Head
Summary: The spectrum of congenital rubella syndrome
(Gregg's syndrome) includes low birth weight, ocular abnormalities (micropthalmos,
cataracts, chorioretinitis), cardiovascular defects, mental retardation, bone
lesion, encephalopathy, pneumonitis, hearing defects (peripheral or central) in
addition to the overt clinical findings of petechiae and associated
thrombocytopenia. True malformation of the CNS is rare. The range of disease in
newborns is extremely variable. Norman
Gregg is an Australian
ophthalmologist who fisrt associated an epidemic of morbilliform rash,
characteristic of rubella, with the appearance of cataracts in newborn children
in 1941.
Pathogenesis: Rubella virus is an RNA
virus that has been classified in the togavirus family. The destructive
(inflammatory) effect is far more contributory to the final
result than the teratogenic effect. Functional abnormalities are usually found
and structural malformation is less common. The gestational age of the conceptus
at the time of infection is a critical factor in determining the outcome.
Incidence: It occurs in 15 - 40% of fetus with a history of
maternal rubella infection during gestation.
Time of the year: rubella infection usually occurs in late winter
and early spring. Babies with congenital rubella are usually seen in late fall.
Be careful when findings suggestive of congenital rubella is seen in baby not
being born not in this period. The patient may be infected in the southern
hemisphere or something other than congenital rubella causes the pathologic
changes.
Mortality: 10-20% mortality during the first year of life. At
the time of birth, the infant may harbor a large amount of virus and may
continue to shed virus for a year.
Delayed manifestations are
common. The most significant delayed manifestations
include hearing loss (87%), congenital heart disease (46%), mental retardation
(39%), cataract or glaucoma (34%). Children thought to have normal hearing when
tested early in life have subsequently been found to have hearing loss when they
reached school age.
Time of infection:
Prior to the 8th week of
gestation, between 50 - 80% of fetus exposed to maternal
rubella become infected; by the 2nd trimester no more than 10-20% of the
infants become infected, and during the 3rd trimester infection of the fetus
is relatively unknown.
The earlier the infection, the more severe the manifestations and more
organs are affected in addition to higher rate of malformation. The later
the congenital infection, the pathologic change due to the inflammatory
effect is more important than the teratogenic effect.
Eye pathology:
Characteristic 'salt and pepper' rubella
retinopathy is not included in the description.
Microcephaly (the most common, probably secondary to chronic encephalitis), chronic encephalitis, hydrocephalus, agenesis of corpus callosum, Down's syndrome, epilepsy and spastic syndromes have all been described. True malformation of the CNS is rare and most of the lesions are destructive in nature.
HISTOPATHOLOGY AND IMMUNOHISTOCHEMISTRY:
Head
Neuropathology: Meningoencephalitis, microcephaly, and retarded
myelination and cytoarchitecture development.
Vascular abnormality:
About half of the cases have a vascular
abnormality, most frequently the capillaries of the basal ganglia are
affected. There is focal destruction of the vessel wall, focal disruption of
the internal elastic membrane, pericapillary collection of granular
material, and endothelial necrosis.
Ischemic
damages are present in over half of the cases and are usually adjacent to
the vascular lesions.
Progress
rubella panencephalitis:
A
sequel of congenital and non-congenital rubella infection that involves the cerebrum,
cerebellum, brain stem.
Essentially
a demyelinating disease of white matter with extensive involvement of the
basal ganglion and brain stem. The cortex is relatively intact.
Widespread
neuronal destruction with perivascular lymphocytic infiltration and
vasculitis
Multinucleated
giant cells may be seen.
Ear pathology:
The deafness is due to defective development
of the organ of Corti and is seldom total. In most cases, the organ of Corti
is partly intact and the patient can perceive some deep frequency. In the
inner ear, the cochlear and the vestibule is affected by the teratogenic
effect at the time of development and also the inflammatory effect on the
cochlear epithelium.