INFORMATION:
The Disease
West Nile Virus is a type of Encephalitis. Encephalitis is an inflammation of the brain, sometimes caused by viruses and bacteria. West Nile is one of four mosquito-borne viruses found in Louisiana, which can cause such an infection. The others are LaCrosse, California and Eastern equine encephalitis. It is also closely related to the St. Louis encephalitis virus found in the United States.
The incubation period in humans for West Nile encephalitis is usually 3 to 15 days. There is no vaccine against West Nile encephalitis. Remember, mosquitoes develop only in water, and water standing just a few days can produce a crop of mosquitoes.
The Risk
The risk of contracting a serious illness after West Nile virus infection is slim. Only 1 in 5 people infected will develop any symptoms at all, while 1 in 150 infected individuals will suffer more serious complications.
Individuals over 50 years of age and people with weak immune systems tend to be most prone to the West Nile virus infection. Fatality rates among those with severe illness due to West Nile virus range from 3% to 15%. Less than 1% of persons infected with West Nile virus will develop a serious illness.
Transmission
West Nile encephalitis is NOT transmitted from person-to-person. Infected mosquitoes are the primary source for West Nile virus. In southern climates, where temperatures are milder, West Nile virus can be transmitted year round.
Mosquitoes become infected when they feed on infected birds. They transmit the virus to humans and animals, while biting to take blood. Following transmission by an infected mosquito, West Nile virus multiplies in the person’s blood system and crosses the blood-brain barrier and enters the brain. The virus interferes with a normal central nervous system functioning and causes inflammation of brain tissue.
Symptoms
The mosquito-borne disease can cause mild flu-like symptoms and more rarely encephalitis, fever, headache, and body aches, occasionally with skin rash and swollen lymph glands. More severe infection may be marked by headache, high fever, neck stiffness, stupor, disorientation, coma, tremors, convulsions, muscle weakness, paralysis, and rarely, death. If you develop a fever with a stiff neck, headache or confusion, call your doctor to determine if further evaluation is needed.
Steps to Take For Protection
