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Overview
Arthropod-borne
viruses, i.e., arboviruses, are viruses that are
maintained in nature through biological transmission between susceptible
vertebrate hosts by blood feeding arthropods (mosquitoes, psychodids,
ceratopogonids, and ticks). Vertebrate infection occurs when the infected
arthropod takes a blood meal. The term 'arbovirus' has no taxonomic
significance. Arboviruses that cause human encephalitis are members of
three virus families: the Togaviridae (genus Alphavirus),
Flaviviridae, and Bunyaviridae.
All arboviral
encephalitides are zoonotic, being maintained in
complex life cycles involving a nonhuman primary vertebrate host and a primary
arthropod vector. These cycles usually remain undetected until humans
encroach on a natural focus, or the virus escapes this focus via a
secondary vector or vertebrate host as the result of some ecologic change.
Humans and domestic animals can develop clinical illness but usually are
"dead-end" hosts because they do not produce significant viremia, and do
not contribute to the transmission cycle. Many arboviruses that cause
encephalitis have a variety of different vertebrate hosts and some are
transmitted by more than one vector. Maintenance of the viruses in nature
may be facilitated by vertical transmission (e.g., the virus is
transmitted from the female through the eggs to the offspring).
Arboviral
encephalitides have a global distribution, but there are four main virus agents of encephalitis in
the United States: eastern equine encephalitis (EEE), western equine
encephalitis (WEE), St. Louis encephalitis (SLE) and La Crosse (LAC)
encephalitis, all of which are transmitted by mosquitoes. Another virus,
Powassan, is a minor cause of encephalitis in the northern United States,
and is transmitted by ticks. A new Powassan-like virus has recently been
isolated from deer ticks. Its relatedness to Powassan virus and its
ability to cause disease has not been well documented. Most cases of
arboviral encephalitis occur from June through September, when arthropods
are most active. In milder (i.e., warmer) parts of the country, where
arthropods are active late into the year, cases can occur into the winter
months.
The majority of human
infections are asymptomatic or may result in a nonspecific flu-like
syndrome. Onset may be insidious or sudden with fever, headache, myalgias,
malaise and occasionally prostration. Infection may, however, lead to
encephalitis, with a fatal outcome or permanent neurologic sequelae.
Fortunately, only a small proportion of infected persons progress to frank
encephalitis.
Experimental studies
have shown that invasion of the central nervous system (CNS), generally
follows initial virus replication in various peripheral sites and a period
of viremia. Viral transfer from the blood to the CNS through the olfactory
tract has been suggested. Because the arboviral encephalitides are viral
diseases, antibiotics are not effective for treatment and no effective
antiviral drugs have yet been discovered. Treatment is supportive,
attempting to deal with problems such as swelling of the brain, loss of
the automatic breathing activity of the brain and other treatable
complications like bacterial pneumonia.
There are no
commercially available human vaccines for these U.S. diseases. There is a
Japanese encephalitis vaccine available in the U.S. A tick-borne
encephalitis vaccine is available in Europe. An equine vaccine is
available for EEE, WEE and Venezuelan equine encephalitis (VEE). Arboviral
encephalitis can be prevented in two major ways: personal protective
measures and public health measures to reduce the population of infected
mosquitoes. Personal measures include reducing time outdoors particularly
in early evening hours, wearing long pants and long sleeved shirts and
applying mosquito repellent to exposed skin areas. Public health measures
often require spraying of insecticides to kill juvenile (larvae) and adult
mosquitoes.
Selection of mosquito
control methods depends on what needs to be achieved; but, in most
emergency situations, the preferred method to achieve maximum results over
a wide area is aerial spraying. In many states aerial spraying may be
available in certain locations as a means to control nuisance mosquitoes.
Such resources can be redirected to areas of virus activity. When aerial
spraying is not routinely used, such services are usually contracted for a
given time period.
Financing of aerial
spraying costs during large outbreaks is usually provided by state
emergency contingency funds. Federal funding of emergency spraying is rare
and almost always requires a federal disaster declaration. Such disaster
declarations usually occur when the vector-borne disease has the potential
to infect large numbers of people, when a large population is at risk and
when the area requiring treatment is extensive. Special large planes
maintained by the United States Air Force can be called upon to deliver
the insecticide(s) chosen for such emergencies. Federal disaster
declarations have relied heavily on risk assessment by the CDC.
Laboratory diagnosis
of human arboviral encephalitis has changed greatly over the last few
years. In the past, identification of antibody relied on four tests:
hemagglutination-inhibition, complement fixation, plaque reduction
neutralization test, and the indirect fluorescent antibody (IFA) test.
Positive identification using these immunoglobulin M (IgM) - and IgG-based
assays requires a four-fold increase in titer between acute and
convalescent serum samples. With the advent of solid-phase
antibody-binding assays, such as enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
(ELISA), the diagnostic algorithm for identification of viral activity has
changed. Rapid serologic assays such as IgM-capture ELISA (MAC-ELISA) and
IgG ELISA may now be employed soon after infection. Early in infection,
IgM antibody is more specific, while later in infection, IgG antibody is
more reactive. Inclusion of monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) with defined
virus specificities in these solid phase assays has allowed for a level of
standardization that was not previously possible.
Virus isolation and
identification have also been useful in defining viral agents in serum,
cerebrospinal fluid and mosquito vectors. While virus isolation still
depends upon growth of an unknown virus in cell culture or neonatal mice,
virus identification has also been greatly facilitated by the availability
of virus-specific MAbs for use in IFA assays. Similarly, MAbs with
avidities sufficiently high to allow for specific binding to virus
antigens in a complex protein mixture (e.g., mosquito pool suspensions)
have enhanced our ability to rapidly identify virus agents in
situ. While polymerase chain reaction (PCR) has been developed to
identify a number of viral agents, such tests have not yet been validated
for routine rapid identification in the clinical setting.
Mosquito-borne
encephalitis offers a rare opportunity in public health to detect the risk
of a disease before it occurs and to intervene to reduce that risk
substantially. The surveillance required to detect risk is being
increasingly refined by the potential utilization of these new
technologies which allows for rapid identification of dangerous viruses in
mosquito populations. These rapid diagnostic techniques used in threat
recognition can shorten public health response time and reduce the
geographic spread of infected vectors and thereby the cost of containing
them. The Arbovirus Diseases Branch of NCID's Division of Vector-Borne
Infectious Diseases has responsibility for CDC's programs in surveillance,
diagnosis, research and control of arboviral encephalitides.
La Crosse
Encephalitis
La Crosse (LAC)
encephalitis was discovered in La Crosse, Wisconsin in 1963. Since then,
the virus has been identified in several Midwestern and Mid-Atlantic
states. During an average year, about 75 cases of LAC encephalitis are
reported to the CDC. Most cases of LAC encephalitis occur in children
under 16 years of age. LAC virus is a Bunyavirus and is a zoonotic
pathogen cycled between the daytime-biting treehole mosquito, Aedes
triseriatus, and vertebrate amplifier hosts (chipmunks, tree
squirrels) in deciduous forest habitats. The virus is maintained over the
winter by transovarial transmission in mosquito eggs. If the female
mosquito is infected, she may lay eggs that carry the virus, and the
adults coming from those eggs may be able to transmit the virus to
chipmunks and to humans.
Historically, most
cases of LAC encephalitis occur in the upper Midwestern states (Minnesota,
Wisconsin, Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio). Recently, more cases are
being reported from states in the mid-Atlantic (West Virginia, Virginia
and North Carolina) and southeastern (Alabama and Mississippi) regions of
the country. It has long been suspected that LAC encephalitis has a
broader distribution and a higher incidence in the eastern United States,
but is under-reported because the etiologic agent is often not
specifically identified.
LAC encephalitis
initially presents as a nonspecific summertime illness with fever,
headache, nausea, vomiting and lethargy. Severe disease occurs most
commonly in children under the age of 16 and is characterized by seizures,
coma, paralysis, and a variety of neurological sequelae after recovery.
Death from LAC encephalitis occurs in less than 1% of clinical cases. In
many clinical settings, pediatric cases presenting with CNS involvement
are routinely screened for herpes or enteroviral etiologies. Since there
is no specific treatment for LAC encephalitis, physicians often do not
request the tests required to specifically identify LAC virus, and the
cases are reported as aseptic meningitis or viral encephalitis of unknown
etiology.
Also found in the
United States, Jamestown Canyon and Cache Valley viruses are related to
LAC, but rarely cause encephalitis.
Eastern Equine
Encephalitis
Eastern equine
encephalitis (EEE) is also caused by a virus transmitted to humans and
equines by the bite of an infected mosquito. EEE virus is an alphavirus
that was first identified in the 1930's and currently occurs in focal
locations along the eastern seaboard, the Gulf Coast and some inland
Midwestern locations of the United States. While small outbreaks of human
disease have occurred in the United States, equine epizootics can be a
common occurrence during the summer and fall.
It takes from 4-10
days after the bite of an infected mosquito for an individual to develop
symptoms of EEE. These symptoms begin with a sudden onset of fever,
general muscle pains, and a headache of increasing severity. Many
individuals will progress to more severe symptoms such as seizures and
coma. Approximately one-third of all people with clinical encephalitis
caused by EEE will die from the disease and of those who recover, many
will suffer permanent brain damage with many of those requiring permanent
institutional care.
In addition to humans,
EEE virus can produce severe disease in: horses, some birds such as
pheasants, quail, ostriches and emus, and even puppies. Because horses are
outdoors and attract hordes of biting mosquitoes, they are at high risk of
contracting EEE when the virus is present in mosquitoes. Human cases are
usually preceded by those in horses and exceeded in numbers by horse cases
which may be used as a surveillance tool.
EEE virus occurs in
natural cycles involving birds and Culiseta melanura, in some
swampy areas nearly every year during the warm months. Where the virus
resides or how it survives in the winter is unknown. It may be introduced
by migratory birds in the spring or it may remain dormant in some yet
undiscovered part of its life cycle. With the onset of spring, the virus
reappears in the birds (native bird species do not seem to be affected by
the virus) and mosquitoes of the swamp. In this usual cycle of
transmission, virus does not escape from these areas because the mosquito
involved prefers to feed upon birds and does not usually bite humans or
other mammals.
For reasons not fully
understood, the virus may escape from enzootic foci in swamp areas in
birds or bridge vectors such as Coquilletidia perturbans and
Aedes sollicitans. These species feed on both birds and mammals
and can transmit the virus to humans, horses, and other hosts. Other
mosquito species such as Ae. vexans and Culex nigripalpus
can also transmit EEE virus. When health officials maintain
surveillance for EEE virus activity, this movement out of the swamp can be
detected, and if the level of activity is sufficiently high, can recommend
and undertake measures to reduce the risk to humans.
Western Equine
Encephalitis
The alphavirus western
equine encephalitis (WEE) was first isolated in California in 1930 from
the brain of a horse with encephalitis, and remains an important cause of
encephalitis in horses and humans in North America, mainly in western
parts of the USA and Canada. In the western United States, the enzootic
cycle of WEE involves passerine birds, in which the infection is
inapparent, and culicine mosquitoes, principally Cx. tarsalis, a
species that is associated with irrigated agriculture and stream
drainages. The virus has also been isolated from a variety of mammal
species. Other important mosquito vector species include Aedes
melanimon in California, Ae. dorsalis in Utah and New Mexico
and Ae. campestris in New Mexico. WEE virus was isolated from field
collected larvae of Ae. dorsalis, providing evidence that vertical
transmission may play an important role in the maintenance cycle of an
alphavirus.
Expansion of irrigated
agriculture in the North Platte River Valley during the past several
decades has created habitats and conditions favorable for increases in
populations of granivorous birds such as the house sparrow, Passer
domesticus, and mosquitoes such as Cx. tarsalis, Aedes
dorsalis and Aedes melanimon. All of these species may play
a role in WEE virus transmission in irrigated areas. In addition to
Cx. tarsalis, Ae. dorsalis and Ae. melanimon, WEE virus also has
been isolated occasionally from some other mosquito species present in the
area. Two confirmed and several suspect cases of WEE were reported from
Wyoming in 1994. In 1995, two strains of WEE virus were isolated from
Culex tarsalis and neutralizing antibody to WEE virus was
demonstrated in sera from pheasants and house sparrows. During 1997, 35
strains of WEE virus were isolated from mosquitoes collected in Scotts
Bluff County, Nebraska.
Human WEE cases are
usually first seen in June or July. Most WEE infections are asymptomatic
or present as mild, nonspecific illness. Patients with clinically apparent
illness usually have a sudden onset with fever, headache, nausea,
vomiting, anorexia and malaise, followed by altered mental status,
weakness and signs of meningeal irritation. Children, especially those
under 1 year old, are affected more severely than adults and may be left
with permanent sequelae, which is seen in 5 to 30% of young patients. The
mortality rate is about 3%.
St. Louis
Encephalitis
In the United States,
the leading cause of epidemic flaviviral encephalitis is St. Louis
encephalitis (SLE) virus. SLE is the most common mosquito-transmitted
human pathogen in the U.S. While periodic SLE epidemics have occurred only
in the Midwest and southeast, SLE virus is distributed throughout the
lower 48 states. Since 1964, there have been 4,437 confirmed cases of SLE
with an average of 193 cases per year (range 4 - 1,967). However, less
than 1% of SLE viral infections are clinically apparent and the vast
majority of infections remain undiagnosed. Illness ranges in severity from
a simple febrile headache to meningoencephalitis, with an overall
case-fatality ratio of 5-15 %. The disease is generally milder in children
than in adults, but in those children who do have disease, there is a high
rate of encephalitis. The elderly are at highest risk for severe disease
and death. During the summer season, SLE virus is maintained in a
mosquito-bird-mosquito cycle, with periodic amplification by peridomestic
birds and Culex mosquitoes. In Florida, the principal vector is
Cx. nigripalpus, in the Midwest, Cx. pipiens pipiens and
Cx. p. quinquefasciatus and in the western United States, Cx.
tarsalis and members of the Cx. pipiens complex.
Powassan
Encephalitis
Powassan (POW) virus
is a flavivirus and currently the only well documented tick-borne
transmitted arbovirus occurring in the United States and Canada. Recently
a Powassan-like virus was isolated from the deer tick, Ixodes
scapularis. Its relationship to POW and its ability to cause human
disease has not been fully elucidated. POW's range in the United States is
primarily in the upper tier States. In addition to isolations from man,
the virus has been recovered from ticks (Ixodes marxi, I. cookei
and Dermacentor andersoni) and from the tissues of a skunk
(Spiligale putorius). It is a rare cause of acute viral
encephalitis. POW virus was first isolated from the brain of a 5-year-old
child who died in Ontario in 1958. Patients who recover may have residual
neurological problems.
Venezuelan
Equine Encephalitis
Like EEE and WEE
viruses, Venezuelan equine encephalitis (VEE) is an alphavirus and causes
encephalitis in horses and humans and is an important veterinary and
public health problem in Central and South America. Occasionally, large
regional epizootics and epidemics can occur resulting in thousands of
equine and human infections. Epizootic strains of VEE virus can infect and
be transmitted by a large number of mosquito species. The natural
reservoir host for the epizootic strains is not known. A large epizootic
that began in South America in 1969 reached Texas in 1971. It was
estimated that over 200,000 horses died in that outbreak, which was
controlled by a massive equine vaccination program using an experimental
live attenuated VEE vaccine. There were several thousand human infections.
A more recent VEE epidemic occurred in the fall of 1995 in Venezuela and
Colombia with an estimated 90,000 human infections. Infection of man with
VEE virus is less severe than with EEE and WEE viruses, and fatalities are
rare. Adults usually develop only an influenza-like illness, and overt
encephalitis is usually confined to children. Effective VEE virus vaccines
are available for equines.
Enzootic strains of
VEE virus have a wide geographic distribution in the Americas. These
viruses are maintained in cycles involving forest dwelling rodents and
mosquito vectors, mainly Culex (Melanoconion) species.
Occasional cases or small outbreaks of human disease are associated with
there viruses, the most recent outbreaks were in Venezuela in 1992, Peru
in 1994 and Mexico in 1995-96.
Other
Arboviral Encephalitides
Many other arboviral
encephalitides occur throughout the world. Most of these diseases are
problems only for those individuals traveling to countries where the
viruses are endemic.
Japanese
Encephalitis
Japanese encephalitis
(JE) virus is a flavivirus, related to SLE, and is widespread throughout
Asia. Worldwide, it is the most important cause of arboviral encephalitis
with over 45,000 cases reported annually. In recent years, JE virus has
expanded its geographic distribution with outbreaks in the Pacific.
Epidemics occur in late summer in temperate regions, but the infection is
enzootic and occurs throughout the year in many tropical areas of Asia.
The virus is maintained in a cycle involving culicine mosquitoes and
waterbirds. The virus is transmitted to man by Culex mosquitoes,
primarily Cx. tritaeniorhynchus, which breed in rice fields. Pigs
are the main amplifying hosts of JE virus in peridomestic
environments.
The incubation period
of JE is 5 to 14 days. Onset of symptoms is usually sudden, with fever,
headache and vomiting. The illness resolves in 5 to 7 days if there is no
CNS involvement. The mortality in most outbreaks is less than 10%, but is
higher in children and can exceed 30%. Neurologic sequelae in patients who
recover are reported in up to 30% of cases. A formalin-inactivated vaccine
prepared in mice is used widely in Japan, China, India, Korea, Taiwan and
Thailand. This vaccine is currently available for human use in the United
States, for individuals who might be traveling to endemic
countries.
Tick-Borne
Encephalitis
Tick-borne
encephalitis (TBE) is caused by two closely related flaviviruses which are
distinct biologically. The eastern subtype causes Russian spring-summer
encephalitis (RSSE) and is transmitted by Ixodes persulcatus,
whereas the western subtype is transmitted by Ixodes
ricinus and causes Central European encephalitis (CEE). The name
CEE is somewhat misleading, since the condition can occur throughout much
of Europe. Of the two subtypes, RSSE is the more severe infection, having
a mortality of up to 25% in some outbreaks, whereas mortality in CEE
seldom exceeds 5%.
The incubation period
is 7 to 14 days. Infection usually presents as a mild, influenza-type
illness or as benign, aseptic meningitis, but may result in fatal
meningoencephalitis. Fever is often biphasic, and there may be severe
headache and neck rigidity, with transient paralysis of the limbs,
shoulders or less commonly the respiratory musculature. A few patients are
left with residual paralysis. Although the great majority of TBE
infections follow exposure to ticks, infection has occurred through the
ingestion of infected cows' or goats' milk. An inactivated TBE vaccine is
currently available in Europe and Russia.
West Nile
Encephalitis
WNV is a flavivirus
belonging taxonomically to the Japanese encephalitis serocomplex that
includes the closely related St. Louis encephalitis (SLE) virus, Kunjin
and Murray Valley encephalitis viruses, as well as others. WNV was first
isolated in the West Nile Province of Uganda in 1937 (2). The first
recorded epidemics occurred in Israel during 1951-1954 and in 1957.
Epidemics have been reported in Europe in the Rhone delta of France in
1962 and in Romania in 1996 (3-5). The largest recorded epidemic occurred
in South Africa in 1974 (6).
An outbreak of
arboviral encephalitis in New York City and neighboring counties in New
York state in late August and September 1999, was initially attributed to
St. Louis encephalitis virus based on positive serologic findings in
cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and serum samples using a virus-specific
IgM-capture enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). The outbreak has
been subsequently confirmed as caused by West Nile virus based on the
identification of virus in human, avian, and mosquito samples.
The virus that caused
the New York area outbreak has been definitively identified as a strain of
WNV. The genomic sequences identified to date from human brain, virus
isolates from zoo birds, dead crows, and mosquito pools are identical. SLE
and West Nile viruses are antigenically related, and cross reactions are
observed in most serologic tests. The isolation of viruses and genomic
sequences from birds, mosquitoes, and human brain tissue permitted the
discovery of West Nile virus in North America and prompted more specific
testing. The limitations of serologic assays emphasize the importance of
isolating the virus from entomologic, clinical, or veterinary
material.
Although it is not
known when and how West Nile virus was introduced into North America,
international travel of infected persons to New York or transport by
imported infected birds may have played a role. WNV can infect a wide
range of vertebrates; in humans it usually produces either asymptomatic
infection or mild febrile disease, but can cause severe and fatal
infection in a small percentage of patients. Within its normal geographic
distribution of Africa, the Middle East, western Asia, and Europe, WNV has
not been documented to cause epizootics in birds; crows and other birds
with antibodies to WNV are common, suggesting that asymptomatic or mild
infection usually occurs among birds in those regions. Similarly,
substantial bird virulence of SLE virus has not been reported. Therefore,
an epizootic producing high mortality in crows and other bird species is
unusual for either WNV or SLE virus. For both viruses, migratory birds may
play an important role in the natural transmission cycles and spread. Like
SLE virus, WNV is transmitted principally by Culex species
mosquitoes, but also can be transmitted by Aedes, Anopheles,
and other species. The predominance of urban Culex pipiens
mosquitoes trapped during this outbreak suggests an important role for
this species. Enhanced surveillance for early detection of virus activity
in birds and mosquitoes will be crucial to guide control measures.
Murray Valley
Encephalitis
Murray Valley
encephalitis (MVE) is endemic in New Guinea and in parts of Australia; and
is related to SLE, WN and JE viruses. Inapparent infections are common,
and the small number of fatalities have mostly been in children.
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