1. Infectious causes of acute encephalitis syndrome hospitalizations in Central India, 2018–20.
- Author
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Tandale, Babasaheb V., Tomar, Shilpa J., Bondre, Vijay P., Sapkal, Gajanan N., Damle, Rekha G., Narang, Rahul, Qazi, Mohiuddin S., Goteti, Padmaja V., Jain, Manish, Jain, Dipty, Guduru, Vijay Kumar, Jain, Jyoti, Gosavi, Rajesh V., Sekhar, V. Chandra, Study-Group, Infectious-Encephalitis-Aetiologies, Pavitrakar, Daya V., Shankarraman, Vasudha, Mahamuni, Shubhangi A., Salunkhe, Asha, and Khude, Poornima
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ENCEPHALITIS , *JAPANESE encephalitis viruses , *CONVALESCENT plasma , *TSUTSUGAMUSHI disease , *HERPES simplex virus , *VACCINATION of children , *BACTERIAL meningitis - Abstract
• Acute encephalitis was a major health problem in Central India. • Children were affected more commonly than adults. • Infectious agents were associated with >40% of cases. • Viruses contributed to over three-fourths of acute encephalitis cases. • Japanese encephalitis virus continued to occur despite vaccination. We enhanced surveillance of hospitalizations of all ages for acute encephalitis syndrome (AES) along with infectious aetiologies, including the Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV). From October 2018 to September 2020, we screened neurological patients for AES in all age groups in Maharashtra and Telangana States. AES cases were enrolled at study hospitals along with other referrals and sampled with cerebrospinal fluid, acute and convalescent sera. We tested specimens for non-viral aetiologies viz. leptospirosis, typhoid, scrub typhus, malaria and acute bacterial meningitis, along with viruses - JEV, Dengue virus (DENV), Chikungunya virus (CHIKV), Chandipura virus (CHPV) and Herpes simplex virus (HSV). Among 4977 neurological hospitalizations at three study site hospitals over two years period, 857 (17.2%) were AES. However, only 287 (33.5%) AES cases were eligible. Among 278 (96.9%) enrolled AES cases, infectious aetiologies were identified in 115 (41.4%) cases, including non-viral in 17 (6.1%) cases - leptospirosis (8), scrub-typhus (3) and typhoid (6); and viral in 98 (35.3%) cases - JEV (58, 20.9%), HSV (22, 7.9%), DENV (15, 5.4%) and CHPV (3, 1.1%). JEV confirmation was significantly higher in enrolled cases than referred cases (10.2%) (p < 0.05). However, the contribution of JEV in AES cases was similar in both children and adults. JE was reported year-round and from adjacent non-endemic districts. The Japanese encephalitis virus continues to be the leading cause of acute encephalitis syndrome in central India despite vaccination among children. Surveillance needs to be strengthened along with advanced diagnostic testing for assessing the impact of vaccination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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