Abstract

Introduction: Stroke is rare in the pediatric population but is often associated with significant morbidity and mortality prompting evaluation for a wide range of pathologic processes. Neurologic manifestations of COVID-19 infection include meningoencephalitis, acute demyelinating encephalomyelitis, Guillain barre and stroke. Throughout the literature, patients seen with neurologic disease had severe COVID-19 infection and/or the multi-system inflammatory syndrome (MIS-C). Only a small proportion of patients had neurologic manifestations as the presenting feature with confusion and seizures being most common. Description: We report the case of a 12-year-old male who presented with left sided weakness and confused speech. This occurred following a 3-day illness with reported fever, malaise, and headache with photophobia resolved. On admission he was afebrile with a left facial droop, grade 4 power in the left hemibody and ankle clonus. Labs revealed an elevated WBC (16.4 x 103 cell/mm3) and CRP (7.3mg/dl), a negative respiratory viral panel and COVID-19 PCR test but positive COVID-19 antibody 315 s/co ratio and increased fibrinogen (523mg/dl) and d-dimers (2.69 mcg/ml). CSF had no WBCs and a negative meningitis-encephalitis panel. Computed tomography of the brain was normal but an MRI brain with angiography and venography showed multiple infarcts consistent with embolic strokes. An echocardiogram revealed a mobile mass at the left ventricular apex measuring 2.5 x 1.6 cm suggestive of a large clot in the presence of normal biventricular function, and no wall motion abnormalities. Due to the risk of re-embolization with devastating neuro-cardiac effects, he underwent left ventriculotomy and clot removal with cardiopulmonary bypass and was continued on therapeutic anticoagulation. Alternative etiologies such as thrombophilia, infective endocarditis or an intracardiac tumor were ruled out. Discussion: Intracardiac thrombosis has been reported in adults and children with COVID-19 but often along with pneumonia, dilated cardiomyopathy and myocardial infarction or acute MIS-C and intracardiac devices. Delayed thrombosis in the absence of MIS-C or cardiac dysfunction is not as frequently seen and brings to light the prolonged prothrombotic state post COVID infection.

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