Person: Cho, Tracey Alexander
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Publication A53 Systematic application of metagenomics NGS to identify and sequence viral pathogens in infections of the central nervous system
(Oxford University Press, 2018) Piantadosi, Anne; Mukerji, Shibani; Ye, Simon; Lemieux, Jacob; Friemark, Lisa; Park, Daniel; Adams, Gordon; Leone, Michael; Goldberg, Marcia; Cho, Tracey Alexander; Rosenberg, Eric; Sabeti, PardisPublication Rapid Detection of Powassan Virus in a Patient With Encephalitis by Metagenomic Sequencing
(Oxford University Press, 2017) Piantadosi, Anne; Kanjilal, Sanjat; Ganesh, Vijay; Khanna, Arjun; Hyle, Emily; Rosand, Jonathan; Bold, Tyler; Metsky, Hayden C; Lemieux, Jacob; Leone, Michael J; Freimark, Lisa; Matranga, Christian B; Adams, Gordon; McGrath, Graham; Zamirpour, Siavash; Telford, Sam; Rosenberg, Eric; Cho, Tracey Alexander; Frosch, Matthew; Goldberg, Marcia; Mukerji, Shibani; Sabeti, PardisAbstract We describe a patient with severe and progressive encephalitis of unknown etiology. We performed rapid metagenomic sequencing from cerebrospinal fluid and identified Powassan virus, an emerging tick-borne flavivirus that has been increasingly detected in the United States.
Publication Role of Infection and Neurologic Dysfunction in Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
(Georg Thieme Verlag KG, 2011) Komaroff, Anthony; Cho, Tracey AlexanderChronic fatiguing illnesses following well-documented infections and acute ‘‘infectious-like’’ illnesses of uncertain cause have been reported for many decades. Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) was first formally defined in 1988. There is considerable evidence that CFS is associated with abnormalities of the central and autonomic nervous systems. There also is evidence linking several infectious agents with CFS, although no agent has been proven to be a cause of the illness. Most of the infectious agents that have been linked to CFS are able to produce a persistent, often life-long, infection and thus are a constant incitement to the immune system. Most also have been shown to be neuropathogens. The evidence is consistent with the hypothesis that CFS, in some cases, can be triggered and perpetuated by several chronic infections that directly or indirectly affect the nervous system, and that symptoms are a reflection of the immune response to the infection.