Background: An autopsy case of a two-month-old male infant who suddenly and unexpectedly died during his sleep, eight days after the onset of benign varicella.
Objectives: To describe post-mortem combined histological and tissue molecular biological techniques for the diagnosis of cytomegalovirus and varicella zoster virus co-infection as a cause of death.
Study design: Real-time quantitative PCR and RT-PCR assays for Herpesviruses, respiratory viruses, Adenovirus, Enterovirus and Parvovirus B19 were performed on multi-organ frozen samples and paraffin-embedded tissues in combination with histology.
Results: Cytomegalovirus and varicella zoster virus were detected by molecular biology with highest viral loads detected in the lungs (4.6×10(7) and 1.9×10(5) genome copies per million of cells, respectively). Pulmonary extensive necrotizing inflammation and immunohistochemistry correlated to virological data. Virological molecular biology was negative on paraffin-embedded tissues.
Conclusions: This case shows that thorough quantitative virological investigations on frozen tissues must be performed in combination with histology and immunohistochemistry for the determination of the cause of a sudden unexplained infant death.
Keywords: Cytomegalovirus; Histopathology; Real-time PCR assay; Sudden unexpected infant death; Varicella zoster virus; Virology.
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