Japanese Encephalitis Flashcards
What is the family?
Flavivirus
How many serotype?
1
How is it related to dengue viruses?
Antigenically related
Describe the pathogenesis
- Infection follows bite by infected mosquito
- Virus replicates locally either in skin, lymphatics or endothelium of blood vessels
- Transient viraemia
- If viraemia terminates before virus penetrates brain/destroys sufficient brain cells to produce overt encephalitis, infection will be asymptomatic/merely a non-encephalitic generalised febrile illness
How does it enter the nervous system?
- Capillary seeding through endothelium into meninges and brain
- Infection of nerve endings with subsequent axoplasmic transport to neurons
Who is the vector, amplifying and incidental host?
How is it transmitted?
Mosquitoes - Culex tritaeniorhynchus, Culex gelidus (vector)
Pigs/birds (amplifying hosts)
Man (incidental host)
Transmitted in an enzootic cycle among mosquitoes and vertebrate hosts
What are the clinical presentations?
- Abrupt onset with fever, headache, malaise, drowsiness, vomiting and generalised convulsions
- Marked and increasing disturbances of sensorium and signs of meningeal irritation (neck rigidty, positive Kernig’s sign)
- CSF abnormalities: pleocytosis, elevated glucose content, raised protein
- Sequelae common in surviving patients: motor weakness, mental backwardness, behaviour disorders (apathy, aggressiveness)
What does histopathology of brain show?
Destruction of neurons and glial cells, perivascular infiltration with lymphocytes, sometimes focal haemorrhage
How to diagnose?
- IgM capture ELISA (IgM produced in CNS during encephalitis and appears in CSF)
- RT-PCR
How to prevent and control?
Inactivated/live attenuated vaccines in some countries