Nipah virus infection gets its name from the village in Malaysia
where the person from whom the virus was first isolated succumbed to the
disease.
Nipah
Virus is an emerging infectious disease that broke out in Malaysia and
Singapore in 1998 and 1999. It first appeared in domestic pigs and has been
found among several species of domestic animals including dogs, cats, goats,
horses and sheep. The infection is also known to affect human beings. The
organism which causes Nipah Virus encephalitis is an RNA or Ribonucleic acid
virus of the family Paramyxoviridae, genus Henipavirus, and is closely related
to Hendra virus.
Nipah virus infection gets its name from the village in
Malaysia where the person from whom the virus was first isolated succumbed to
the disease. The virus has been listed in the World Organisation for
Animal Health (OIE) Terrestrial Animal Health Code and must be reported to the
OIE (OIE Terrestrial Animal Health Code).
How does Nipah spread or get transmitted?
The disease spreads through fruit bats or ‘flying foxes,’
of the genus Pteropus, who are natural reservoir hosts of the Nipah and Hendra
viruses. The virus is present in bat urine and potentially, bat faeces, saliva,
and birthing fluids. Presumably, the first incidence of Nipah virus infection
occurred when pigs in Malaysian farms came in contact with the bats who had
lost their habitats due to deforestation. Furthermore, transmission
between farms may be due to fomites – or carrying the virus on clothing,
equipment, boots, vehicles.
Nipah Virus, which is a zoonotic disease, was known to
affect humans in Malaysia and Singapore after coming in direct contact with the
excretions or secretions of infected pigs. Reports from outbreaks in Bangladesh
suggest transmission from bats in the process of drinking raw palm sap
contaminated with bat excrement or climbing trees coated in the same.
In Bangladesh and India, there have been reports of
possible human-to-human transmission of the disease. Therefore, precautions are
necessary for hospital workers in charge of taking care of the infected
patients. Precautions should also be taken when submitting and handling
laboratory samples, as well as in slaughterhouses.
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