Case report: Isolation of a European bat lyssavirus type 2a from a fatal human case of rabies encephalitis
- 18 August 2003
- journal article
- case report
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Medical Virology
- Vol. 71 (2) , 281-289
- https://doi.org/10.1002/jmv.10481
Abstract
A 55‐year‐old bat conservationist was admitted to Ninewells Hospital, Dundee, Scotland, on November 11, 2002, with an acute haematemesis. He gave a 5‐day history of pain and paraesthesia in the left arm, followed by increasing weakness of his limbs with evidence of an evolving encephalitis with cerebellar involvement. The patient had never been vaccinated against rabies and did not receive postexposure treatment. Using a hemi‐nested reverse transcriptase‐polymerase chain reaction (RT‐PCR), saliva samples taken intravitam from different dates proved positive for rabies. A 400‐bp region of the nucleoprotein gene was sequenced for confirmation and identified a strain of European bat lyssavirus (EBLV) type 2a. The diagnosis was confirmed using the fluorescent antibody test (FAT) and by RT‐PCR on three brain samples (cerebellum, medulla, and hippocampus) taken at autopsy. In addition, a mouse inoculation test (MIT) was performed. Between 13 and 17 days postinfection, clinical signs of a rabies‐like illness had developed in all five inoculated mice. Brain smears from each infected animal were positive by the FAT and viable virus was isolated. This fatal incident is only the second confirmed case of an EBLV type‐2 infection in a human after exposure to bats. J. Med. Virol. 71:281–289, 2003. Copyright © Crown Copyright 2003. Recorded with the permission of the controller of the Majesty's Stationery Office. Published by Wiley‐Liss, Inc.Keywords
This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- Case report: Rapid ante‐mortem diagnosis of a human case of rabies imported into the UK from the PhilippinesJournal of Medical Virology, 2002
- Rabies re-examinedThe Lancet Infectious Diseases, 2002
- Knowledge of Bat Rabies and Human Exposure Among United States CaversEmerging Infectious Diseases, 2002
- European Bat Lyssavirus Infection in Spanish Bat PopulationsEmerging Infectious Diseases, 2002
- Non–rabies Lyssavirus human encephalitis from fruit bats: Australian bat Lyssavirus (pteropid Lyssavirus) infectionNeuropathology and Applied Neurobiology, 1998
- Clinically silent rabies infection in (zoo) batsVeterinary Record, 1998
- Ten‐year survey of British bats for the existence of rabiesVeterinary Record, 1996
- CLUSTAL W: improving the sensitivity of progressive multiple sequence alignment through sequence weighting, position-specific gap penalties and weight matrix choiceNucleic Acids Research, 1994
- FATAL ENCEPHALITIS CAUSED BY A BAT-BORNE RABIES-RELATED VIRUSBrain, 1988
- Is There a Risk to Contacts of Patients with Rabies?Clinical Infectious Diseases, 1987