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Dr Millichap has disclosed no financial relationship relevant to this commentary. This commentary does not contain a discussion of an unapproved/investigative use of a commercial product/device.
Investigators from Japan retrospectively reviewed the medical records of children with influenza-associated delirious behavior (DB) to assess their clinical course.1 Children were eligible if they were admitted for treatment of rapid-antigen detection assay-confirmed influenza at the study hospital from 2009–2013, were diagnosed with DB, and had an MRI and EEG within 96 hours of DB onset. DB was defined as the presence of 1 or more of the following components: visual hallucinations, nonvisual sensory misperceptions, unexpected emotional changes, incoherent speech, purposeless …
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