The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Cold-weather virus in summer baffles doctors, worries parents

- By Lindsey Tanner

The recent emergence of a virus that typically sickens children in colder months has baffled U.S. pediatrici­ans and put many infants in hospitals with troublesom­e coughs and breathing trouble.

RSV, or respirator­y syncytial virus, is a common cause of cold-like symptoms, but can be serious for infants and the elderly. Cases dropped dramatical­ly last year, with people staying home and social distancing, but began cropping up as pandemic restrictio­ns eased.

“I’ve never seen anything like this before,” Dr. Kate Dutkiewicz, medical director at Beacon Children’s Hospital in South Bend, Ind., said after treating two RSV-infected infants recently. Both needed oxygen treatment to help with breathing. “I’ve never seen cases in July, or close to July.”

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued a health advisory on June 10 about the increase in RSV cases across parts of the South. Cases have appeared in many other states, too.

LaRanda St. John grew worried when her 6-weekold son, Beau, developed a bad cough a few weeks ago. The Mattoon, Ill., mother has a medical background and suspected RSV when she opened his sleeper and saw his chest heaving with labored breathing.

“The doctors office couldn’t get me in because they were flooded with people calling” about children with similar symptoms, St. John said.

A positive test in the ER confirmed RSV. The infant developed a rapid heart rate and had to be hospitaliz­ed overnight. His 16-monthold sister, Lulabelle, also contracted the virus, but was not as sick and didn’t need hospitaliz­ation.

St. John said she wondered if it might be COVID-19 because it is the wrong season for RSV.

“I can’t say I was relieved, because I know RSV is just as bad,” she said.

Children infected with either virus usually develop only mild illness, but for some, these infections can be serious.

Among U.S. children under age 5, RSV typically leads to 2 million doctors-office visits each year, 58,000 hospitaliz­ations and up to 500 deaths, higher than the estimated toll on children from COVID-19.

Among adults aged 65 and up, RSV can lead to pneumonia and causes almost 180,000 hospitaliz­ations and 14,000 deaths yearly. Cases in children and adults usually occur in fall through early spring.

Off-season cases in Australia were a tip-off that the same might happen in the United States, said Dr. Larry Kociolek, infectious-disease specialist with Chicago’s Lurie Children’s Hospital.

Typically, infants are exposed to RSV during their first year, often when older siblings become infected in school and bring the virus home, Kociolek said.

But, he added, “there were a lot of kids and babies who were not exposed to RSV in winter of 2020 and winter of 2021. That just leaves a much larger proportion of susceptibl­e infants.”

In infants, symptoms may include fussiness, poor feeding, fever and lethargy. Children may have runny noses, decreased appetite, coughs and wheezing.

But in very young infants and those born prematurel­y, the virus can cause small airways in the lungs to become swollen and filled with mucous. Babies who develop this condition, called bronchioli­tis, may require hospitaliz­ation, and oxygen or ventilator treatment.

There is no approved treatment for RSV, although a once-monthly injection of an antibody-based medicine is sometimes prescribed before and throughout RSV season, to help prevent severe RSV lung problems in premature infants and other babies at risk for serious disease.

Reinfectio­ns are common but typically cause milder symptoms than the initial illness.

Kociolek said the recent unusual surge in cases could be partly due to more testing because of COVID-19 fears. In usual times, parents may dismiss RSV symptoms as nothing serious, but now may fear they signal the pandemic virus.

RSV spreads through contact with airborne droplets from an infected person, but it is much more likely than COVID-19 to linger on skin and other surfaces, including toys, which can also be a source of transmissi­on.

 ?? LARANDA ST. JOHN — VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? LaRanda St. John’s 6-week-old son, Beau, in a hospital bed in June in Matoon, Ill. Beau developed a bad cough, which turned out to be RSV, which usually strikes in winter.
LARANDA ST. JOHN — VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS LaRanda St. John’s 6-week-old son, Beau, in a hospital bed in June in Matoon, Ill. Beau developed a bad cough, which turned out to be RSV, which usually strikes in winter.

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