Nipahvirus

Nipahvirus is most likely spread from bats to other species and causes lethal encephalitis in humans and respiratory illness in pigs. Different species are affected with varying severity but it seems to have an unprecedented zoonotic capacity and the humans affected either die or receive permanent b...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Fällman, Jenny
Formato: First cycle, G2E
Lenguaje:sueco
sueco
Publicado: 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/1064/
_version_ 1855570259177635840
author Fällman, Jenny
author_browse Fällman, Jenny
author_facet Fällman, Jenny
author_sort Fällman, Jenny
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description Nipahvirus is most likely spread from bats to other species and causes lethal encephalitis in humans and respiratory illness in pigs. Different species are affected with varying severity but it seems to have an unprecedented zoonotic capacity and the humans affected either die or receive permanent brain damage. Full recovery is possible but very uncommon. Pigs that live and are bread in the areas that these bats frequent are constantly in danger of contracting pneumonias and meningitis and they can spread the virus further on to the people who work with the pigs and process their carcasses. These workers could then infect other humans in their immediate surroundings, their families for instance. To avoid spreading the virus we must also protect the food intended for human consumption because there have been reports about people falling ill from Nipahvirus after drinking palm sap gathered in areas with a bat population. Another important aspect of the virus is the loss of food and the economic consequences of having to stamp out infections on pig farms. The virus pathology is not entirely uncomplicated. There are great individual differences and the symptoms of the infection differ with different transmission routes. If inoculated nasally-orally or naturally infected the pigs did much better and suffered the same degree of lesions or illness than when inoculated subcutaneously. If this also applies to humans is unknown. The pigs that fell sick in the first outbreak primarily developed respiratory diseases but a few cases of neurological symptoms were present. The humans involved in the same outbreak mostly suffered CNS-symptoms but also to an extent respiratory illness and lesions of the kidney and other organs. As many as 70% of humans who develop symptoms die, most of them within two weeks, and the rest suffers permanent brain damage of varying degrees.
format First cycle, G2E
id RepoSLU1064
institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
language swe
swe
publishDate 2010
publishDateSort 2010
record_format eprints
spelling RepoSLU10642012-10-08T12:14:18Z https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/1064/ Nipahvirus Fällman, Jenny Animal diseases Human medicine, health, and safety Occupational diseases and hazards Veterinary science and hygiene - General aspects Nipahvirus is most likely spread from bats to other species and causes lethal encephalitis in humans and respiratory illness in pigs. Different species are affected with varying severity but it seems to have an unprecedented zoonotic capacity and the humans affected either die or receive permanent brain damage. Full recovery is possible but very uncommon. Pigs that live and are bread in the areas that these bats frequent are constantly in danger of contracting pneumonias and meningitis and they can spread the virus further on to the people who work with the pigs and process their carcasses. These workers could then infect other humans in their immediate surroundings, their families for instance. To avoid spreading the virus we must also protect the food intended for human consumption because there have been reports about people falling ill from Nipahvirus after drinking palm sap gathered in areas with a bat population. Another important aspect of the virus is the loss of food and the economic consequences of having to stamp out infections on pig farms. The virus pathology is not entirely uncomplicated. There are great individual differences and the symptoms of the infection differ with different transmission routes. If inoculated nasally-orally or naturally infected the pigs did much better and suffered the same degree of lesions or illness than when inoculated subcutaneously. If this also applies to humans is unknown. The pigs that fell sick in the first outbreak primarily developed respiratory diseases but a few cases of neurological symptoms were present. The humans involved in the same outbreak mostly suffered CNS-symptoms but also to an extent respiratory illness and lesions of the kidney and other organs. As many as 70% of humans who develop symptoms die, most of them within two weeks, and the rest suffers permanent brain damage of varying degrees. 2010-04-19 First cycle, G2E NonPeerReviewed application/pdf swe https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/1064/1/fallman_j_100504.pdf Fällman, Jenny, 2010. Nipahvirus : patologi hos en nyupptäckt zoonos. First cycle, G2E. Uppsala: (VH) > Dept. of Biomedical Sciences and Veterinary Public Health (until 231231) <https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/view/divisions/OID-713.html> urn:nbn:se:slu:epsilon-6-202 swe
spellingShingle Animal diseases
Human medicine, health, and safety
Occupational diseases and hazards
Veterinary science and hygiene - General aspects
Fällman, Jenny
Nipahvirus
title Nipahvirus
title_full Nipahvirus
title_fullStr Nipahvirus
title_full_unstemmed Nipahvirus
title_short Nipahvirus
title_sort nipahvirus
topic Animal diseases
Human medicine, health, and safety
Occupational diseases and hazards
Veterinary science and hygiene - General aspects
url https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/1064/
https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/1064/