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Complications

Authoring team

These include:

  • persistent fatigue – appears to be present in 9% to 22% of cases at six months after illness onset compared with 0% to 6% following an ordinary upper respiratory infection (1). One prospective study of patients with EBV-IM found that patients required nearly 2 months to achieve pre-illness functional status (2)
  • hepatitis - probably occurs in all cases and abnormal liver function tests are usual (3)
  • splenic rupture - in 0.1 to 0.5 % of cases with mortality rates up to 30%. The majority of patients are male with an average age of 22 years. The average time between onset of symptoms and rupture is 14 days (4)
  • thrombocytopaenia
  • haemolytic anaemia
  • cardiac involvement - 10% of patients develop minor T-wave changes
  • meningitis - benign
  • encephalitis - 33% mortality of an 11 case series
  • single nerve palsies
  • Guillain-Barre syndrome
  • depression and malaise
  • airway blocked by pharyngeal oedema - rare
  • nephritis - extremely rare and excellent prognosis
  • pneumonitis
  • acute interstitial nephritis (3)
  • myocarditis and cardiac conduction abnormalities (3)
  • neurologic abnormalities
  • cranial nerve palsies(3)
  • retrobulbar neuritis (3)

Infection may be fatal in males with the rare Duncan's syndrome.

Very rarely, patients develop chronic active disease, which carries a poor prognosis with high mortality. Diagnosis should be considered in patients with persistent symptoms of IM for >3 months (5). Death usually is a result of lymphoma, haemophagocytic syndrome, or fulminant hepatitis (6)

Reference:

  1. Candy B et al. Recovery from infectious mononucleosis: a case for more than symptomatic therapy? A systematic review. Br J Gen Pract. 2002;52(483):844-51
  2. Rea TD, Russo JE, Katon W, et al. Prospective study of the natural history of infectious mononucleosis caused by Epstein-Barr virus. J Am Board Fam Pract. 2001 Jul-Aug;14(4):234-42.
  3. Mark H. Ebell. Epstein-Barr Virus Infectious Mononucleosis. Am Fam Physician 2004;70:1279-87,1289-90.
  4. Bartlett A, Williams R, Hilton M. Splenic rupture in infectious mononucleosis: a systematic review of published case reports. Injury. 2016 Mar;47(3):531-8.
  5. Fugl A, Andersen CL. Epstein-Barr virus and its association with disease - a review of relevance to general practice. BMC Fam Pract. 2019 May 14;20(1):62.
  6. Kimura H, Hoshino Y, Kanegane H, et al. Clinical and virologic characteristics of chronic active Epstein-Barr virus infection. Blood. 2001 Jul 15;98(2):280-6.

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