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Possible high risk of transmission of the Nipah virus in South and South East Asia: a review.

Jagadish JoshiYogendra ShahKishor PandeyRam Prashad OjhaChet Raj JoshiLok Raj BhattShyam Prakash DumrePushpa Raj AcharyaHem Raj JoshiShikha RimalRamesh ShahiDeepak PokharelKamal Singh KhadkaBimal DahalSaroj NepalRam Singh DhamiKrishna Prasad PantRajdip BasnetBasu Dev Pandey
Published in: Tropical medicine and health (2023)
Nipah virus (NiV) is a zoonotic, single-stranded RNA virus from the family Paramyxoviridae, genus Henipavirus. NiV is a biosafety-level-4 pathogen that is mostly spread by Pteropus species, which serve as its natural reservoir host. NiV is one of the major public health challenges in South and South East Asia. However, few molecular studies have been conducted to characterise NiV in a specific region. The main objective of this review is to understand the epidemiology, pathogenesis, molecular surveillance, transmission dynamics, genetic diversity, reservoir host, clinical characteristics, and phylogenetics of NiV. South and South East Asian nations have experienced NiV outbreaks. Phylogenetic analysis confirmed that two primary clades of NiV are in circulation. In humans, NiV causes severe respiratory illness and/or deadly encephalitis. NiV is mainly diagnosed by ELISA along with PCR. Therefore, we recommend that the governments of the region support the One Health approach to reducing the risk of zoonotic disease transmission in their respective countries.
Keyphrases
  • public health
  • genetic diversity
  • healthcare
  • early onset
  • risk assessment
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