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Israel: 12 Cases Of Acute Hepatitis In Children

Illustrative. A nurse stands at the entrance to the pediatric ICU for COVID-19 patients at Hadassah Ein Kerem. (Hadassah spokesperson)

Following a letter on Tuesday from Israel’s Health Ministry warning of an outbreak of acute hepatitis in children which has been identified worldwide, the ministry reported on Tuesday night that at least 12 such cases have been identified in Israel in the past two months.

The ministry stated that “following the Health Ministry’s request to directors of hospitals and Kupot Cholim to report on children with acute hepatitis, the ministry was informed of 12 cases of acute hepatitis for unknown reasons in children hospitalized in recent months in two hospitals, Shaarei Tzedek [in Jerusalem] and Schneider Children’s Hospital [in Petach Tikvah]. The cases are being investigated.”

Seven of the 12 children were hospitalized in Schneider, and medical staff there reported that all the children had been diagnosed in the past with COVID.

Prof Dror Mevorach, the director of the coronavirus department at Hadassah Ein Kerem, told 103FM Radio on Wednesday that they still don’t know if the cases they’re seeing are caused by a virus. “They thought it was post-COVID, similar to PIMS. We still don’t know.”

The World Health Organization said on Friday that the U.K. has been investigating at least 74 cases in which children came down with hepatitis, or liver inflammation, the World Health Organization said Friday. Three similar cases in Spain and a few in Ireland are being investigated, the WHO said.

Meanwhile, U.S. health officials say they are looking into nine similar cases. All were in Alabama, but officials say they are looking to see if there are more elsewhere.

“Given the increase in cases reported over the past one month and enhanced case search activities, more cases are likely to be reported in the coming days,” WHO officials said in a statement.

The U.S. children ranged in age from 1 to 6 years old, and two required liver transplants. The European cases are in a similar age range, though some have been older, WHO officials said.

The WHO first became aware of the unusual illnesses early this month, when they learned of 10 children in Scotland with liver problems. One got sick in January and the nine others in March. All became severely ill and were diagnosed with hepatitis after being taken to the hospital.

The liver processes nutrients, filters the blood and fights infections. The infections caused symptoms like jaundice, diarrhea and abdominal pain. Hepatitis can be life-threatening if left untreated.

Since then, British health officials have identified at least 64 more cases. None died, but six needed liver transplants, the WHO said Friday.

Laboratory testing has ruled out the hepatitis type A, B, C and E viruses that usually cause such illnesses. Officials say they are not aware of international travel or other factors that might have put the kids at risk.

But they noted there’s been a recent surge in the spread of adenoviruses.

There are dozens of adenoviruses, many of them associated with cold-like symptoms, fever, sore throat and pink eye. But some versions can trigger other problems, including inflammation in the stomach and intestines.

Adenoviruses previously have been linked to hepatitis in children, but mostly in kids with weakened immune systems.

Some of the European children tested positive for adenovirus, and some tested positive for COVID-19. But more lab work is needed to explore any potential associations with specific viruses, the WHO said.

Alabama health officials say they have been looking into an increase in hepatitis in children since November. In each case, the child tested positive for adenovirus. Officials are exploring a link to one particular version — adenovirus 41 — that’s normally associated with gut inflammation.

None of the Alabama cases had any underlying health conditions that would seem to put them at risk for liver illness, health officials said.

“At this time adenovirus may be the cause for these, but investigators are still learning more — including ruling out the more common causes of hepatitis,” the CDC said in a statement.

(YWN Israel Desk – Jerusalem & AP)



2 Responses

  1. Is anyone goiing to address the pink elephant in the room? “Adenoviruses previously have been linked to hepatitis in children, but mostly in kids with weakened immune systems.” Were these kids vaccinated against COVID? Are we seeing another side effect of the vaccine?

  2. When you inject viruses into the anatomy – such as are found in the c19 shots, a viral overload is a typical reaction, and different people overcome the load differently, mostly based on their immune system strength.

    This is apparently what happened especially after the Delta variant in March of ‘2020 – these c19 cases were different (not just the radiation blood poisoning as the initial variants), but were witnessed by health care workers internationally as different – the suggestion universally was that the virus was mostly internally generated from injected virus material (ie, from the c19 injections!).

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