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There are more than a dozen viruses that can
cause encephalitis, spread by either human-to human contact or by
animal bites. Encephalitis may occur with several common viral
infections of childhood. Viruses and viral diseases that may cause
encephalitis include:
- chickenpox
- measles
- mumps
- Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)
- cytomegalovirus infection
- HIV
- herpes simplex
- herpes zoster (shingles)
- herpes B
- polio
- rabies
- mosquito-borne viruses (arboviruses)
Primary encephalitis is caused by direct
infection by the virus, while secondary encephalitis is due to a
post-infectious immune reaction to viral infection elsewhere in the
body. Secondary encephalitis may occur with measles, chickenpox,
mumps, rubella, and EBV. In secondary encephalitis, symptoms usually
begin five to 10 days after the onset of the disease itself and are
related to the breakdown of the myelin sheath that covers nerve
fibers.
In rare cases, encephalitis may follow
vaccination against some of the viral diseases listed above.
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, a very rare brain disorder caused by an
infectious particle called a prion, may also cause encephalitis.
Mosquitoes spread viruses responsible for equine
encephalitis (eastern and western types), St. Louis encephalitis,
California encephalitis, and Japanese encephalitis. Lyme disease,
spread by ticks, can cause encephalitis, as can Colorado tick fever.
Rabies is most often spread by animal bites from dogs, cats, mice,
raccoons, squirrels, and bats and may cause encephalitis.
Equine encephalitis is carried by mosquitoes that
do not normally bite humans but do bite horses and birds. It is
occasionally picked up from these animals by mosquitoes that do bite
humans. Japanese encephalitis and St. Louis encephalitis are also
carried by mosquitoes. The risk of contracting a mosquito-borne
virus is greatest in mid- to late summer, when mosquitoes are most
active, in those rural areas where these viruses are known to exist.
Eastern equine encephalitis occurs in eastern and southeastern
United States; western equine and California encephalitis occur
throughout the West; and St. Louis encephalitis occurs throughout
the country. Japanese encephalitis does not occur in the United
States, but is found throughout much of Asia. The viruses
responsible for these diseases are classified as arbovirus and these
diseases are collectively called arbovirus encephalitis.
Herpes simplex encephalitis, the most common form
of sporadic encephalitis in western countries, is a disease with
significantly high mortality. It occurs in children and adults and
both sides of the brain are affected. It is theorized that brain
infection is caused by the virus moving from a peripheral location
to the brain via two nerves, the olfactory and the trigeminal (largest
nerves in the skull).
Herpes simplex encephalitis is responsible for
10% of all encephalitis cases and is the main cause of sporadic,
fatal encephalitis. In untreated patients, the rate of death is 70%
while the mortality is 15-20% in patients who have been treated with
acyclovir. The symptoms of herpes simplex encephalitis are fever,
rapidly disintegrating mental state, headache, and behavioral
changes.
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