Post-acute infection syndrome
Post-acute infection syndromes or post-infectious syndromes are medical conditions characterized by symptoms attributed to a prior infection. While it is commonly assumed that people either recover or die from infections, long-term symptoms—or sequelae—are a possible outcome as well. Examples include long COVID, myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome, and post-Ebola virus syndrome. Common symptoms include post-exertional malaise, severe fatigue, neurocognitive symptoms, unrefreshing sleep, flu-like symptoms, and pain. The pathology of most of these conditions is not understood and management is generally symptomatic.
Signs and symptoms
PAIS symptoms are often non-specific and similar despite diverse prior infections. Symptoms commonly included in definitions of PAIS include post-exertional malaise, severe fatigue, neurocognitive and sensory symptoms, flu-like symptoms, unrefreshing sleep, muscle pain, and joint pain. Symptoms can vary among affected people. Some PAIS symptoms are more specific. For example, eye problems are common in post-Ebola virus syndrome, and profound weakness is seen in post-polio syndrome and post-West Nile fevers.Symptoms can be severe and debilitating, resulting in lowered quality of life or inability to work. The onset of symptoms may be delayed, often by decades in the case of post-polio syndrome, and their severity may fluctuate over time.
Causes
Pathogens associated with PAISs include SARS-CoV-2, Ebolavirus, Dengue virus, poliovirus, SARS-CoV-1, Chikungunya virus, Epstein–Barr virus, West Nile virus, Ross River virus, Coxsackie B, influenza A virus subtype H1N1, varicella zoster virus, Coxiella burnetii, Borrelia, and Giardia. However, the strength of evidence associating these pathogens with chronic illness varies.The pathophysiology of most PAISs is poorly understood, but the overlap in symptoms despite disparate infectious triggers implies a possible shared pathology. For most conditions, no chronic infection has been detected.
Mechanism
The pathology of post-acute infections syndromes is not understood. The commonality in symptoms between illnesses may point to a common pathology. Major hypotheses include persistence of the original pathogen or its remnants, autoimmunity, chronic inflammation, reactivation of other latent infections, microbiome dysbiosis, or damage to organs, which may include the lungs, brain, kidneys, heart, or blood vessels.Diagnosis
In the absence of tests for most PAISes, diagnosis is usually based on the patient's history, symptoms, and eliminating other potential causes. Available tests often fail to explain patients' symptoms, but this does not suggest they are not real. The complexity of diagnosing PAISes may lead to long delays in diagnosis.Diagnostic criteria vary among illnesses, and have at times been the subject of intense debate. For example, several definitions of ME/CFS have been in use.