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Volume 26, Number 12—December 2020
Research Letter

One-Year Retrospective Review of Psychiatric Consultations in Lassa Fever, Southern Nigeria

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Author affiliations: Ambrose Alli University, Ekpoma, Edo State, Nigeria and Institute of Lassa Fever Research and Control, Irrua Specialist Teaching Hospital, Edo State, Nigeria (E.O. Okogbenin, S.A. Okogbenin, P.O. Okokhere); Institute of Lassa Fever Research and Control, Irrua Specialist Teaching Hospital, Edo State (M.O. Obagaye, B.E. Aweh, W.O. Eriyo)

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Abstract

We conducted a retrospective review of psychiatric consultations for hospitalized patients with Lassa fever in southern Nigeria. Ten (8.8%) of 113 patients had psychiatric consultations. Delirium was the most common psychiatric manifestation complicating Lassa fever. Findings suggest that psychiatric intervention could improve overall outcomes of Lassa fever.

Viral hemorrhagic fever viruses may cause a wide spectrum of neurologic manifestations, including psychiatric syndromes (13). To the best of our knowledge, only 1 study, performed in 1991 in Sierra Leone, attempted to show that psychiatric syndromes are possible in acute Lassa fever (LF) (3). This case series, reported by Solbrig and McCormick, showed psychiatric syndromes including delirium, depression, and abnormal behavior in 3 of 9 patients with central nervous system (CNS) manifestations (3).

This review was conducted at the Institute of Lassa Fever Research and Control, Irrua Specialist Teaching Hospital Irrua, Edo state, Nigeria, a national LF referral center. We retrospectively reviewed the files of patients with Lassa virus reverse transcription PCR–positive blood samples, who were admitted at the center during 2012, and included in the study patients who had psychiatric consultations. A questionnaire designed by the researchers was used to collect information from patient files. We examined each file for psychopathology and coded the eventual diagnosis using the International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision (ICD-10) (4).

Ten (8.8%) of 113 hospitalized patients with LF had psychiatric consultations. All 10 patients met ICD-10 criteria for delirium (hyperactive motor type) and 2 had co-occurring depression. None of the 10 patients had a history of psychiatric illness. All 10 patients received supportive psychotherapy and haloperidol in low doses (2.5−5 mg daily). Citalopram (20 mg) was used for depression. All 113 patients were given ribavirin and received symptomatic management and treatment of medical complications and other preexisting conditions by the infectious disease physicians. All patients recovered from delirium and depression within 3 weeks and survived the infection despite an overall mortality rate of 45.1% (54/113) in the hospitalized patients (Table).

The finding of delirium in 100% of our patients with psychiatric manifestations is comparable with findings of a study that evaluated psychiatric illness in a typhoid fever cohort in Nigeria, where delirium was reported in 73% of 26/136 patients with psychiatric symptoms (5). Although mild and self-limiting confusion occurs in many febrile illnesses, delirium has been reported to be associated with prolonged hospital stay (14–40 days) in patients with infectious diseases; this was statistically significant (p<0.001) when compared with patients without delirium (hospital stay <14 days) in Nigeria (6). The strict ICD-10 criteria require symptoms of delirium to be present in each of the following 5 areas: disturbance of consciousness and attention, cognition, psychomotor, emotional, and sleep-wake cycle disturbances (4). Using these criteria, we found delirium in our patients, who were all hyperactive, and ruled out mild confusion. Of note is that fever had subsided in 4 of our patients by the time of onset of psychiatric symptoms. No patient with anxiety was seen, and only 2 patients had co-occurring depression.

The absence of past psychiatric illness in the patients we studied suggests that LF was likely the direct or indirect cause of delirium/depression in these patients. Psychiatric manifestations and viral infections are linked through a complex interaction; in our patients, this interaction could have been a direct cytopathic effect of LF virus on their CNS. Generally, viruses enter the CNS through several pathways, which may include a hematogenous route, directly breaching the blood–brain barrier, or through infected leukocytes, which then infect vascular endothelial cells (2,7). A case of infection with Lassa virus in cerebrospinal fluid has been reported in a patient with blood samples negative for Lassa virus (8). In fact, psychiatric symptoms without neurologic symptoms may be the initial presentation of viral encephalitis (9).

All our patients, like some other patients with severe LF, had various medical complications, such as acute renal failure, septicemia, and electrolyte disturbances. These are well documented etiologic factors for delirium (10) and could have contributed to delirium in our patients.

All 10 patients recovered from delirium and depression within 3 weeks of intervention and survived the infection despite an overall mortality rate of 45.1% for patients admitted to the hospital with LF. This is irrespective of the presence of poor prognostic factors in these patients and the fact that the same LF case management protocol was applied to all patients admitted to the center. Unfortunately, there were no data on viral load and oxygen saturation for comparison between our patients and other patients with LF who did not receive psychiatric intervention. Although we cannot adequately explain this excellent prognosis, we note that identifying and managing psychiatric complications could contribute to improved LF outcome.

The limitation of this study was that it was retrospective and looked at only those who had psychiatric consultations, which made the sample size small and did not permit causal inferences. A prospective study might have identified more cases and given more room for a comparative study design. Based on our findings, we recommended prospective studies to determine the pattern of psychiatric manifestations in LF and integrating mental healthcare into the management of LF.

Dr. Esther O. Okogbenin is an associate professor of psychiatry at Ambrose Alli University Ekpoma Edo State, Nigeria, and a consultant psychiatrist at the Irrua Specialist Teaching Hospital in Edo State. She is the head of the Department of Mental Health at Ambrose Alli University, with primary research in consultation–liaison psychiatry.

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References

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Cite This Article

DOI: 10.3201/eid2612.200084

Original Publication Date: November 08, 2020

1This author was the principal investigator.

2These authors were co-principal investigators.

3These authors contributed equally to this article.

Table of Contents – Volume 26, Number 12—December 2020

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Please use the form below to submit correspondence to the authors or contact them at the following address:

Esther Osemudiamen Okogbenin, Irrua Specialist Teaching Hospital, KM 87, Benin Auchi Rd, PMB 08, Irrua, Edo State, Nigeria

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Page created: August 03, 2020
Page updated: November 19, 2020
Page reviewed: November 19, 2020
The conclusions, findings, and opinions expressed by authors contributing to this journal do not necessarily reflect the official position of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the Public Health Service, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or the authors' affiliated institutions. Use of trade names is for identification only and does not imply endorsement by any of the groups named above.
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