West Nile Virus Flashcards
Family
Flaviviridae
Vector-borne disease
mosquitoes: Culex pipiens, Culex tarsalis, and Culex quinquefasciatus
Reservoir Species
wide variety of bird species
can also be found in people, horses, some carnivores, alligators, bats, rabbits, and squirrels
Transmission Cycle
Mosquitoes prefer birds (passerines most)
Infected mosquitoes-> naive birds-> infected birds-> naive mosquitoes
Some species become highly viremic-> improves transfer of virus to mosquitoes
Dead end hosts bit by mosquitos
most do not develop enough viremia to infect naive mosquitoes
Transmission methods in mammals
transuterine, transmammary, and blood transfusion
Pathogenesis
replicates at sight of infection-> lymphoid tissue via bloodstream-> toll-like receptors-> CNS
Directly infects neurons in gray matter, brainstem, and spinal cord
Collateral damage to neighboring cells due to immune response
Clinical Signs
Some animals can be asymptomatic or have mild symptoms
Emaciation, sudden death, paresis, ataxia, head tilt, tremors, torticollis
Clinical signs mammals
muzzle twitches, muscle spasms
Pathologic Legions
Myocarditis
-inflammation of spleen, kidneys, or liver with secondary megaly
-focal areas of necrosis
-multiple organ shutdown may lead quickly to death
-hemorrhages on organ surfaces including brain
-bleeding in the mouth, nares, or cloaca
Testing
MRI to look for gross changes, WNV-specific IgM ELISA, plaque reduction neutralization tests comparing titers to cross-reacting agents
Treatment
Supportive Care
Management
Local control methods: use chickens as sentinels, surveillance for increased death in wild birds, mosquito control (pesticides, removal of still-standing water), equine vaccination