نتایج جستجو برای: west nile virus

تعداد نتایج: 489850  

Journal: :Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy 2008
Niklaus H Mueller Nagarajan Pattabiraman Camilo Ansarah-Sobrinho Prasanth Viswanathan Theodore C Pierson R Padmanabhan

West Nile virus and dengue virus are mosquito-borne flaviviruses that cause a large number of human infections each year. No vaccines or chemotherapeutics are currently available. These viruses encode a serine protease that is essential for polyprotein processing, a required step in the viral replication cycle. In this study, a high-throughput screening assay for the West Nile virus protease wa...

2004
Bradley J. Blitvich Ildefonso Fernández-Salas Juan F. Contreras-Cordero María A. Loroño-Pino Nicole L. Marlenee Francisco J. Díaz José I. González-Rojas Nelson Obregón-Martínez Jorge A. Chiu-García William C. Black Barry J. Beaty

West Nile virus RNA was detected in brain tissue from a horse that died in June 2003 in Nuevo Leon State, Mexico. Nucleotide sequencing and phylogenetic analysis of the premembrane and envelope genes showed that the virus was most closely related to West Nile virus isolates collected in Texas in 2002.

2017
D. Pilalas L. Skoura A. Margariti D. Chatzidimitriou A. Sarantopoulos O. Tsachouridou A. Papa S. Metallidis

The emergence of West Nile virus lineage 2 in central Macedonia, Greece, in 2010 resulted in large outbreaks for 5 consecutive years. We report a case of viral meningitis in an individual infected with human immunodeficiency virus type 1, which preceded the recognition of the outbreak and was confirmed retrospectively as West Nile virus neuroinvasive disease.

2018
Mohan Rudrappa Laxmi Kokatnur Oleg Chernyshev

West Nile virus infection in humans is mostly asymptomatic. Less than 1% of neuro-invasive cases show a fatality rate of around 10%. Acute flaccid paralysis of respiratory muscles leading to respiratory failure is the most common cause of death. Although the peripheral nervous system can be involved, isolated phrenic nerve palsy leading to respiratory failure is rare and described in only two c...

Journal: :Euro surveillance : bulletin Europeen sur les maladies transmissibles = European communicable disease bulletin 2011
P Bagnarelli K Marinelli D Trotta A Monachetti M Tavio R Del Gobbo Mr Capobianchi S Menzo L Nicoletti F Magurano Pe Varaldo

On 10 September 2011, a patient in his 50s was admitted to hospital in Ancona, Italy, after six days of high fever and no response to antibiotics. West Nile virus (WNV) infection was suspected after tests to determine the aetiology of the fever were inconclusive. On 20 September, WNV-specific IgM and IgG antibodies were detected in the patient’s serum. Genomic sequencing of the viral isolate sh...

2007
C. Todd Davis Li Li Fiona J. May Rudy Bueno James A. Dennett Adil A. Bala Hilda Guzman Darwin Elizondo-Quiroga Robert B. Tesh Alan D. Barrett

The accumulation and fixation of mutations in West Nile virus (WNV) led to the emergence of a dominant genotype throughout North America. Subsequent analysis of 44 isolates, including 19 new sequences, from Houston, Texas, suggests that WNV has reached relative genetic stasis at the local level in recent years.

Journal: :Vector borne and zoonotic diseases 2010
Geoffrey E Hill Lynn Siefferman Mark Liu Hassan Hassan Thomas R Unnasch

We tested for negative effects of West Nile virus (WNV) on a breeding population of eastern bluebirds in Alabama by comparing fecundity and reproductive success in years before and after the arrival of WNV and by comparing fecundity, reproductive success, and overwinter survival of seropositive and seronegative individuals within the same population in the same years. We found that female blueb...

Journal: :Emerging Infectious Diseases 2008
Andrés Gómez A. Marm Kilpatrick Laura D. Kramer Alan P. Dupuis Joseph G. Maffei Scott J. Goetz Peter P. Marra Peter Daszak A. Alonso Aguirre

We examined West Nile virus (WNV) seroprevalence in wild mammals along a forest-to-urban gradient in the US mid-Atlantic region. WNV antibody prevalence increased with age, urbanization, and date of capture for juveniles and varied significantly between species. These findings suggest several requirements for using mammals as indicators of transmission.

2004
A. TOWNSEND PETERSON NICHOLAS KOMAR OLIVER KOMAR ADOLFO NAVARRO-SIGÜENZA MARK B. ROBBINS ENRIQUE MARTÍNEZ-MEYER

The past five years have seen the arrival and extremely rapid expansion of West Nile virus (WNV) in the Western Hemisphere. The rapid sweep across North America has permitted little time for developing knowledge of the virus’s potential impacts on wildlife in the New World. Given this information gap, we here summarize for the ornithological community what is known or can be anticipated for WNV...

2012
Paul J. Carson Stephanie M. Borchardt Brian Custer Harry E. Prince Joan Dunn-Williams Valerie Winkelman Leslie Tobler Brad J. Biggerstaff Robert Lanciotti Lyle R. Petersen Michael P. Busch

To determine risk for West Nile virus (WNV) neuroinvasive disease in North Dakota, we tested plasma samples from blood donors for WNV IgG and compared infection rates with reported WNV neuroinvasive disease incidence. We estimate that 1 in 244 WNV infections leads to neuroinvasive disease; risk is substantially increased among men and older persons.

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