ENCEPHALITIS
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Encephalitis is an inflammation of the brain. The
inflammation is a reaction of the body's immune system to infection
or invasion. During the inflammation, the brain's tissues become
swollen. The combination of the infection and the immune reaction to
it can cause headache and a fever, as well as more severe symptoms
in some cases.
Approximately 2,000 cases of encephalitis are
reported to the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta, GA each year.
The viruses causing primary encephalitis can be epidemic or sporadic.
The polio virus is an epidemic cause. Arthropod-borne viral
encephalitis is responsible for most epidemic viral encephalitis.
The viruses live in animal hosts and mosquitos that transmit the
disease. The most common form of non-epidemic or sporadic
encephalitis is caused by the herpes simplex virus, type 1 (HSV-1)
and has a high rate of death. Mumps is another example of a sporadic
cause. |
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