Nipah Virus Infection (NiV) Causes, Symptoms, Diagnosis, Treatment (original) (raw)

What is Nipah virus infection (NiV)?

Nipah virus (NiV)

NiV is a zoonotic virus (a disease that animals can transmit to humans, known as a zoonosis); the virus often infects animals such as pigs and fruit bats (Pteropodidae), but they may be asymptomatic.

Nipah virus infection is a zoonosis transferred by contact with a NiV-infected animal or person or their secretions that has a high fatality rate in infected humans.

The cause of a Nipah virus infection is the Nipah virus (NiV). The virus can cause a range of symptoms in people, and cases can range from mild to deadly. Nipah virus (NiV) is a member of the family Paramyxoviridae, genus Henipavirus and is related to Hendra virus that infects horses. NiV is a zoonotic virus (a disease that animals can transmit to humans, known as a zoonosis); the virus often infects animals such as pigs and fruit bats (Pteropodidae), but they may be asymptomatic (not show any symptoms). In addition, flying foxes of the genus Pteropus in the Malaysian peninsula can carry NiV.

People first discovered NiV in a village named Kampung Sungai Nipah in 1999 in Malaysia; the virus was named after the village. This first recorded outbreak began in 1998-1999 and reached Singapore. A new strain occurred in 2001 in Bangladesh and India. Small outbreaks of NiV have happened in these countries since 2001. An outbreak in India (state of Kerala) occurred in May 2018. Fruit bats and rabbits are the likely sources of NiV that infected people. The Indian government sources say that the situation is currently under control. During this outbreak, at least 11 people have died and another 14 people contracted the virus, while another 22 are awaiting test results.

What causes Nipah virus infection?

Humans who have direct contact with infected fruit bats or infected pigs are the usual way an outbreak begins. However, the consumption of raw date palm sap contaminated with bat feces is another common way to get the disease. Human-to-human transmission occurs during close contact between family members and/or medical caregivers.

The risk factors for this infection include

The virus is moderately contagious as it needs close contact and usually infects the family members and/or medical caregivers of NiV-infected individuals.

The incubation period (time from initial exposure to virus to when symptoms begin) for NiV usually varies from about five to 14 days. There have been a few cases with much longer incubation periods, as long as 45 days.

Doctors do not completely understand the contagious period for infection, but it likely begins during the incubation period (proven in pigs) and continues until the patient stops shedding virus. In most patients, this occurs when the symptoms and signs of the infection are diminished or gone.

IMAGES Nipah Virus Infection See pictures of viral skin conditions See Images

What are the symptoms of Nipah virus infection?

The signs and symptoms of Nipah virus infection begin with

Encephalitis follows and those infected may exhibit

Diagnosis of Nipah virus infection

A combination of tests that diagnoses NiV includes the following.

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What are the treatments for Nipah virus infection?

What is the prognosis for Nipah virus infection?

Is it possible to prevent Nipah virus infection?

There are ways to reduce the risk of developing NiV infections.

References

Switzerland. World Health Organization (WHO). "Nipah Virus." May 22, 2018. http://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/nipah-virus.