نتایج جستجو برای: nipah

تعداد نتایج: 1669  

Journal: :Emerging Infectious Diseases 2001
J. M. Yob H. Field A. M. Rashdi C. Morrissy B. van der Heide P. Rota A. bin Adzhar J. White P. Daniels A. Jamaluddin T. Ksiazek

Nipah virus, family Paramyxoviridae, caused disease in pigs and humans in peninsular Malaysia in 1998-99. Because Nipah virus appears closely related to Hendra virus, wildlife surveillance focused primarily on pteropid bats (suborder Megachiroptera), a natural host of Hendra virus in Australia. We collected 324 bats from 14 species on peninsular Malaysia. Neutralizing antibodies to Nipah virus ...

2015
Hossain M.S. Sazzad Stephen P. Luby Ute Ströher Peter Daszak Sharmin Sultana Sayma Afroj Mahmudur Rahman Emily S. Gurley

We measured the performance of exposure screening questions to identify Nipah virus encephalitis in hospitalized encephalitis patients during the 2012-13 Nipah virus season in Bangladesh. The sensitivity (93%), specificity (82%), positive predictive value (37%), and negative predictive value (99%) results suggested that screening questions could more quickly identify persons with Nipah virus en...

2009
Katharine N. Bossart Zhongyu Zhu Deborah Middleton Jessica Klippel Gary Crameri John Bingham Jennifer A. McEachern Diane Green Timothy J. Hancock Yee-Peng Chan Andrew C. Hickey Dimiter S. Dimitrov Lin-Fa Wang Christopher C. Broder

Nipah virus is a broadly tropic and highly pathogenic zoonotic paramyxovirus in the genus Henipavirus whose natural reservoirs are several species of Pteropus fruit bats. Nipah virus has repeatedly caused outbreaks over the past decade associated with a severe and often fatal disease in humans and animals. Here, a new ferret model of Nipah virus pathogenesis is described where both respiratory ...

2006
Edward Tabor Vincent P. Hsu

Nipah and Hendra viruses are two zoonotic paramyxoviruses with an ability to cause fatal encephalitic and respiratory diseases in humans. Hendra virus was first identified in humans in Australia in 1994, with horses as the intermediate host. Nipah virus emerged in humans in 1998 in Malaysia, with pigs as the intermediate host. Nipah virus was later also identified in India and Bangladesh in 200...

2018
Md Zakiul Hassan Hossain M.S. Sazzad Stephen P. Luby Katharine Sturm-Ramirez Mejbah Uddin Bhuiyan Mohammed Ziaur Rahman Md Muzahidul Islam Ute Ströher Sharmin Sultana Mohammad Abdullah Heel Kafi Peter Daszak Mahmudur Rahman Emily S. Gurley

Nipah virus (NiV) has been transmitted from patient to caregivers in Bangladesh presumably through oral secretions. We aimed to detect whether NiV-infected patients contaminate hospital surfaces with the virus. During December 2013-April 2014, we collected 1 swab sample from 5 surfaces near NiV-infected patients and tested surface and oral swab samples by real-time reverse transcription PCR for...

2012
Bronwyn A. Clayton Deborah Middleton Jemma Bergfeld Jessica Haining Rachel Arkinstall Linfa Wang Glenn A. Marsh

Human infections with Nipah virus in Malaysia and Bangladesh are associated with markedly different patterns of transmission and pathogenicity. To compare the 2 strains, we conducted an in vivo study in which 2 groups of ferrets were oronasally exposed to either the Malaysia or Bangladesh strain of Nipah virus. Viral shedding and tissue tropism were compared between the 2 groups. Over the cours...

Journal: :Zoonoses and public health 2010
I Sendow H E Field A Adjid A Ratnawati A C Breed Darminto C Morrissy P Daniels

Compared to other viruses, research on Nipah virus has been limited in Indonesia because attributable disease outbreaks have not been reported. However, Nipah virus is a zoonotic Biosafety Level 4 (BSL4) agent, so strategic monitoring is prudent. Farmer interviews and a serologic survey of 610 pig sera and 99 bat sera from West Kalimantan province were conducted. Farmers reported no recent or h...

2003
Kay - Sin TAN Chong - Tin TAN Khean - Jin GOH

An outbreak of Nipah encephalitis secondary to a new paramyxovirus virus occured among pig farmers in Malaysia from September 1998 to June 1999. The objective of this study was to characterize several epidemiological aspects of the outbreak. The study was based on patients admitted to the University Hospital, Kuala Lumpur and their household members. Fourteen households with 110 members were st...

2015
A. M. NASER M. J. HOSSAIN H. M. S. SAZZAD N. HOMAIRA E. S. GURLEY G. PODDER S. AFROJ S. BANU P. E. ROLLIN P. DASZAK B.-N. AHMED M. RAHMAN S. P. LUBY

This paper explores the utility of cluster- and case-based surveillance established in government hospitals in Bangladesh to detect Nipah virus, a stage III zoonotic pathogen. Physicians listed meningo-encephalitis cases in the 10 surveillance hospitals and identified a cluster when ⩾2 cases who lived within 30 min walking distance of one another developed symptoms within 3 weeks of each other....

2013
Indrawati Sendow Atik Ratnawati Trevor Taylor R. M. Abdul Adjid Muharam Saepulloh Jennifer Barr Frank Wong Peter Daniels Hume Field

Nipah virus causes periodic livestock and human disease with high case fatality rate, and consequent major economic, social and psychological impacts. Fruit bats of the genus Pteropus are the natural reservoir. In this study, we used real time PCR to screen the saliva and urine of P. vampyrus from North Sumatera for Nipah virus genome. A conventional reverse transcriptase (RT-PCR) assay was use...

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