Objectives: To determine the effect of clinical presentation and cognitive changes on the postdischarge outcome in older adult patients with West Nile fever (WNF).
Design: Retrospective, cohort analysis.
Setting: Meir Hospital located in the center of Israel in the Sharon region.
Participants: Thirty-two patients aged 65 and older hospitalized during a WNF outbreak.
Measurements: All patients' charts were analyzed retrospectively with special emphasis on their cognitive and functional state. A follow-up examination of patients with functional decline at discharge was performed after 3 months.
Results: A change in consciousness, rather than in cognition, predicted the outcome. The death rate was 22% (7/32); all fatal cases were aged 78 and older. Similarly, the functional decline and residual damage appeared only in the older age group (>or=75). Eighty-eight percent of the survivors returned to their premorbid function. In contrast to other viral infections, chronic conditions in the subjects had no effect on the outcome.
Conclusions: In older adults, WNF carries a high death rate, but the outcome is favorable for the survivors.