Case Reports in Infectious Diseases (Jan 2020)

Clinical Features of Four West Nile Virus Cases and Its Molecular Characterization from a South Indian Tertiary Care Hospital

  • Shoba Mammen,
  • Aiswarya Nair,
  • Santhosh Kumar,
  • Zayina Zonderveni,
  • A. T. Prabhakar,
  • Turaka Vijay Prakash,
  • Sanjith Aaron,
  • Mathew Alexander,
  • Anand Zachariah,
  • Asha Mary Abraham

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2020/1315041
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2020

Abstract

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West Nile virus (WNV) is currently a significant reemerging virus of the 21st century. It belongs to the family Flaviviridae and genus Flavivirus. Although it is primarily transmitted by the Culex spp of mosquitoes, other routes of transmission are also well defined. Of eight lineages described, Lineage 1a has been reported from many parts of South India and is known to cause neuroinvasive illness. Many tests and serological techniques have been described to diagnose WNV infection such as complement fixation, neutralization, heamagglutination inhibition, ELISA, and PCR for molecular confirmation. The latter far outweighs the limitations inherent in the other tests. WNV infection is being reported from Vellore for the first time after 1968. This paper aims to describe four cases of WNV infection causing central nervous system manifestations with its molecular characterization. West Nile virus infection was diagnosed with the available molecular techniques such as PCR and sequencing, which emphasizes the need for considering West Nile virus in the differential diagnosis of acute meningoencephalitis and the wider availability of molecular diagnostic tests.