Difference between revisions of "West Nile Virus"

From WikiVet English
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
Line 1: Line 1:
 +
{{OpenPagesTop}}
 
Also known as: '''''West Nile Fever —— West Nile Fever Virus — WNF — WNFV'''''
 
Also known as: '''''West Nile Fever —— West Nile Fever Virus — WNF — WNFV'''''
  
Line 39: Line 40:
  
 
{{review}}
 
{{review}}
 +
 +
{{OpenPages}}
 +
 
[[Category:Flaviviruses]] [[Category:Horse_Viruses]] [[Category:Zoonoses]] [[Category:Expert_Review - Horse]]
 
[[Category:Flaviviruses]] [[Category:Horse_Viruses]] [[Category:Zoonoses]] [[Category:Expert_Review - Horse]]

Latest revision as of 18:11, 31 July 2012


Also known as: West Nile Fever —— West Nile Fever Virus — WNF — WNFV

Introduction

This is a relatively newly discovered virus, of the family Flaviviridae, that is transmitted by mosquitoes. Reservoir hosts are birds and the final hosts are horses and humans, hence this disease is zoonotic.

This virus originated in Africa as the name suggests, but it is now considered that two strains exist; the Old world, avirulent strain and the New world virulent mutant, which is mainly found in the USA. The virus originally entered the USA from Africa via mosquitoes or birds and then remained in the New York area as there is a lot of stagnant water for mosquitoes to breed. Over 200 people have died from the disease, as well as many birds. One in seven UK birds have the antibody to the virus but no clinical disease or deaths have been seen from it. This is presumed to be because the strain in the UK is currently avirulent and also mosquitoes are too uncommon in the UK for the disease to take hold and cause human illness.

Signalment

Horses and Man. Humans can be infected by the disease and show no clinical signs. Predisposing factors to making the disease much more severe include immunosuppression e.g. HIV, AIDs or chemotherapy, old age or very young children and pregnant women.

Clinical Signs

The virus can cause no clinical signs whatsoever, or it can cause mild signs such as abdominal pain, pyrexia, diarrhoea, inappetance, lethargy, vomiting, enlarged lymph nodes and weakness. In humans it may cause the above, plus headaches, muscle aches, rash and nausea. In severe cases, the virus can cause West Nile Encephalitis, in which an aseptic encephalitis with concurrent fatalities may occur.

Diagnosis

Clinical signs plus time of year and signalment of affected animal or human may be indicative of the disease.

Control

Control measures include vector control (mosquitoes), such as draining away standing water, using ectoparasiticide sprays, fly rugs on horses and stabling horses at dawn and dusk (when mosquitoes are most prevalent).

There is a vaccine being developed for horses, as the risk to the UK is more severe with introduction of passports and horses travelling all over the world. The disease is still currently notifiable in the UK.

Also see WNF in Donkeys.

References

Bridger, J and Russell, P (2007) Virolgy Study Guide, Royal Veterinary College

Knottenbelt, D.C., A Handbook of Equine Medicine for Final Year Students University of Liverpool

Merck &a Co (2008) The Merck Veterinary Manual (Eighth Edition), Merial

Reed, S.M, Bayly, W.M. and Sellon, D.C (2010) Equine Internal Medicine (Third Edition), Saunders




Error in widget FBRecommend: unable to write file /var/www/wikivet.net/extensions/Widgets/compiled_templates/wrt674192c04f0d24_64788063
Error in widget google+: unable to write file /var/www/wikivet.net/extensions/Widgets/compiled_templates/wrt674192c055abe0_95675042
Error in widget TwitterTweet: unable to write file /var/www/wikivet.net/extensions/Widgets/compiled_templates/wrt674192c05c1582_48777950
WikiVet® Introduction - Help WikiVet - Report a Problem