Abstract

Neurological respiratory deficits are serious outcomes of West Nile virus (WNV) disease. WNV patients requiring intubation have a poor prognosis. We previously reported that WNV-infected rodents also appear to have respiratory deficits when assessed by whole-body plethysmography and diaphragmatic electromyography. The purpose of this study was to determine if the nature of the respiratory deficits in WNV-infected rodents is neurological and if deficits are due to a disorder of brainstem respiratory centers, cervical spinal cord (CSC) phrenic motor neuron (PMN) circuitry, or both. We recorded phrenic nerve (PN) activity and found that in WNV-infected mice, PN amplitude is reduced, corroborating a neurological basis for respiratory deficits. These results were associated with a reduction in CSC motor neuron number. We found no dramatic deficits, however, in brainstem-mediated breathing rhythm generation or responses to hypercapnia. PN frequency and pattern parameters were normal, and all PN parameters changed appropriately upon a CO2 challenge. Histological analysis revealed generalized microglia activation, astrocyte reactivity, T cell and neutrophil infiltration, and mild histopathologic lesions in both the brainstem and CSC, but none of these were tightly correlated with PN function. Similar results in PN activity, brainstem function, motor neuron number, and histopathology were seen in WNV-infected hamsters, except that histopathologic lesions were more severe. Taken together, the results suggest that respiratory deficits in acute WNV infection are primarily due to a lower motor neuron disorder affecting PMNs and the PN rather than a brainstem disorder. Future efforts should focus on markers of neuronal dysfunction, axonal degeneration, and myelination.

Highlights

  • About 20 % of people infected with West Nile virus (WNV) develop fever with headache, diarrhea, body and joint aches, or rash

  • The results suggest that respiratory deficits in acute WNV infection are primarily due to a lower motor neuron disorder affecting phrenic motor neuron (PMN) and the phrenic nerve (PN) rather than a brainstem disorder

  • The goal of the current study was to determine if the respiratory abnormality following acute WNV infection in mouse and hamster is due to dysfunction of the cervical spinal cord (CSC)/PMNs, or of brainstem respiratory centers, or both

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Summary

Introduction

About 20 % of people infected with West Nile virus (WNV) develop fever with headache, diarrhea, body and joint aches, or rash. Less than 1 % of patients who become infected develop a serious neurological disease during the acute phase that is characterized by neck stiffness, disorientation, respiratory distress, tremors, paralysis, and seizures. Some of these neurological sequelae may persist for long periods or become permanent (Carson et al 2006; Sejvar et al 2008; Sejvar et al 2003). Neurological respiratory deficits are serious outcomes of WNV disease. Neurological respiratory deficits in WNV patients are associated with histopathologic lesions in motor neurons of the anterior spinal cord

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