# Influenza A-Associated Acute Necrotizing Encephalitis With Complete Recovery Following Early Immunomodulatory Therapy

**Authors:** Adeola A Adeleke, Sarah M Wall, Shannon L Andrews, Beth K Thielen

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.103739 · 2026-02-16

## TL;DR

A young child with influenza A developed severe brain inflammation but fully recovered after early immunomodulatory treatment.

## Contribution

Demonstrates successful treatment of acute necrotizing encephalitis with early multimodal immunomodulatory therapy.

## Key findings

- Bilateral thalamic and symmetric brain lesions were observed in a child with influenza A.
- Cytokines like IL-6 and IL-8 were significantly higher in cerebrospinal fluid than in blood.
- The patient fully recovered after treatment with immunoglobulin, steroids, anakinra, and plasma exchange.

## Abstract

We describe a case of a previously healthy 19-month-old female who experienced rapid neurological deterioration following infection with influenza A (H1N1) and was found to have neuroimaging features characteristic of acute necrotizing encephalitis (ANE), including bilateral thalamic involvement and additional multifocal, symmetric gray- and white-matter lesions. At initial presentation, multiple proinflammatory cytokines were markedly elevated in the peripheral blood. Interestingly, while multiple cytokines were also elevated in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), interleukin-6 (IL-6) and IL-8 levels were substantially higher in CSF (590 and 1330 pg/ml, respectively) than in serum (118 and 68.2 pg/ml, respectively), providing insights into disease pathogenesis and central nervous system-specific immune activation. The patient was treated in a stepwise manner with multimodal immunomodulatory therapy, including intravenous immunoglobulin (days 1-2), corticosteroids (start day 1), IL-1 receptor antagonist anakinra (start day 2), and plasma exchange (start day 3). Blood cytokine levels declined rapidly with initiation of immunomodulatory therapy. She demonstrated a favorable clinical response with complete neurological recovery, despite an unfavorable ANE severity score of 6 that has historically been associated with high mortality. This case highlights the importance of early recognition of ANE in young children with recent influenza infection, the need for prompt multidisciplinary management, consideration of targeted immunomodulatory therapy, and further investigation of cytokine profiling as a tool to improve diagnosis and guide treatment.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** IL-6 (PubChem CID 165368475), IL-8 (PubChem CID 169410440)
- **Diseases:** acute necrotizing encephalitis (MONDO:0003336)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** CXCL8 (C-X-C motif chemokine ligand 8) [NCBI Gene 3576] {aka GCP-1, GCP1, IL8, LECT, LUCT, LYNAP}, IL6 (interleukin 6) [NCBI Gene 3569] {aka BSF-2, BSF2, CDF, HGF, HSF, IFN-beta-2}
- **Diseases:** thalamic involvement (MESH:D013786), Influenza A (MESH:D007251), neurological deterioration (MESH:D009422), infection (MESH:D007239), ANE (MESH:D004684), gray- and white-matter lesions (MESH:D056784)
- **Species:** H1N1 subtype (serotype) [taxon 114727], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12999356/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12999356