City
Epaper

Intranasal herpes infection can produce neurobehavioural symptoms: Study

By ANI | Updated: March 10, 2025 23:06 IST

Washington DC [US], March 10 : A study from University of Illinois Chicago researchers finds that herpes infection through ...

Open in App

Washington DC [US], March 10 : A study from University of Illinois Chicago researchers finds that herpes infection through the nose can lead to anxiety, motor impairment and cognitive issues.

The research is the first to show that, by exploiting a cellular enzyme, the virus can produce behavioral symptoms. The finding emphasizes the need for prevention and treatment of a virus carried by billions of people worldwide.

The research, published in mBio, is the latest from the College of Medicine group led by Deepak Shukla, the Marion H. Schenk Esq. Professor in Ophthalmology for Research of the Aging Eye and UIC professor of microbiology and immunology.

Shukla's laboratory previously studied how the virus spreads to the eye and brain and can lead to blindness, encephalitis and other conditions.

The new research looked at intranasal infection, where viral particles enter the body through the nose and have more direct access to the nervous system.

"If an infected individual is shedding virus via tears, it could reach the nasal cavity, where it could go more directly to the brain," Shukla said. "I think it's underdiagnosed and understudied, but the neurological consequences, we believe, are much more severe than you would normally see with fever blisters or ocular infection."

In animal experiments, the researchers observed high levels of inflammation and neuronal damage just days after HSV-1 infection. For several months after equivalent to decades of life in humans infected animals performed more poorly on tests of motor coordination and memory and exhibited more anxiety-like behavior when compared to controls.

"There is definitely nerve damage if you take the intranasal route, and the effects are long-term, which is alarming," Shukla said.

The researchers also studied heparanase, a cellular enzyme the group previously studied for its role in HSV-1 reinfection and long-term effects.

Animals with a deactivated gene for heparanase did not show the same neurobehavioral deficits after infection as control animals. That suggests the enzyme mediates some of the virus' damaging effects in the brain.

"These insights open the door to potential therapeutic approaches to mitigate the effects of neuroinflammation and prevent long-term brain injury caused by viral infections," said Hemant Borase, a UIC postdoctoral researcher and first author of the study.

Herpes simplex virus-1 is extremely common. The World Health Organization estimates that nearly two-thirds of the global population carry the virus.

"The virus reactivates throughout life; it's a lifelong infection" said Chandrashekhar Patil, research assistant professor in the College of Medicine and co-author of the paper. "So, I think this awareness will be really important among the large population which is carrying this virus."

Tibor Valyi-Nagy, professor of pathology, is also a co-author of the paper. The study was funded by grants from the National Institutes of Health.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

Other SportsIPL 2026: Sooryavanshi the hero again as RR thrash RCB by six wickets

NationalAI Summit protest case: Court grants interim protection to IYC member, directs him to join investigation

BusinessTripura emerges fastest-growing economies in NE, attracts Rs 2,000 cr investment interest at Bengaluru conclave

NationalTripura emerges fastest-growing economies in NE, attracts Rs 2,000 cr investment interest at Bengaluru conclave

International'Only expert status, no right to conduct technical review': UK regulator responds to families over Air India crash probe

Health Realted Stories

HealthThis common nutrient could supercharge cancer treatment: Study

HealthNo Sugar For 15 Days? Here's How Your Body Will Transform

HealthMP to build medical hub on Indore-Ujjain corridor: Dy CM Shukla​

LifestyleBrisk Walking Tips: Best Time, Water Intake and Mistakes to Avoid

HealthJharkhand to act against facilities storing bio-medical waste beyond 48 hours