Arthropod-borne encephalitis: an overview for the clinician and emerging considerations.
Abhilasha Pankaj BoruahKiran T ThakurPublished in: Postgraduate medical journal (2022)
The rapid spread of arboviral infections in recent years has continually established arthropod-borne encephalitis to be a pressing global health concern. Causing a wide range of clinical presentations ranging from asymptomatic infection to fulminant neurological disease, the hallmark features of arboviral infection are important to clinically recognise. Arboviral infections may cause severe neurological presentations such as meningoencephalitis, epilepsy, acute flaccid paralysis and stroke. While the pathogenesis of arboviral infections is still being investigated, shared neuroanatomical pathways among these viruses may give insight into future therapeutic targets. The shifting infection transmission patterns and evolving distribution of arboviral vectors are heavily influenced by global climate change and human environmental disruption, therefore it is of utmost importance to consider this potential aetiology when assessing patients with encephalitic presentations.
Keyphrases
- climate change
- global health
- liver failure
- endothelial cells
- human health
- public health
- atrial fibrillation
- intensive care unit
- risk assessment
- high resolution
- current status
- mass spectrometry
- pluripotent stem cells
- atomic force microscopy
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- temporal lobe epilepsy