Eastern, Western, and Venezuelan Equine Encephalitis Virus is an illness that is contractible between all equine animals (horses, donkeys, and zebras) and humans. Horses can spread this virus to humans. Humans, however, cannot spread this virus to animals; therefore, it is a direct zoonosis. Depending on whether the virus is Eastern, Western, or Venezuelan, it can be abbreviated as EEEV, WEEV, or VEEV. Another name for this virus is encephalomyelitis (VEE). This virus is classified as Togaviridae Alphavirus, and is a viral agent. Emus, ostriches, and swine can also contract this virus. The infection usually appears as hepatitis and or a gastro intestinal tract infection. .
This virus can also be contracted by hamsters, apes, monkeys, rabbits, and guinea pigs.
Bats and birds serve as the reservoir host for EEEV and WEEV. Horses and bats are the reservoir hosts for VEEV. In the reservoir host, the viral pathogen replicates and creates a high titer. The creation of a high titer makes the virus infectious for its vector, which is the mosquito. If humans contract the virus, they serve as an incidental host. Horses serve as an incidental host for EEEV and WEEV, but not VEEV. For VEEV, horses act as the reservoir species.
If horses contract the disease, they can have multiple symptoms and signs of infection. For EEEV and WEEV, these symptoms include fever, a lack of appetite, and lethargy. The infected horse may also act somewhat bipolar, being extremely excited one minute and extraordinarily tired the next. In horses, this virus can result in paresis, seizures and (in extreme cases) coma. Symptoms in humans (if infected with this virus) include fever, headache, depression and nausea. If left untreated, these symptoms can result in altered mentation, paralysis, and sometimes coma. If children contract this virus, the effects may result in paralysis, mental retardation, and possibly a persistent seizure disorder.
For this reason West Nile Virus is limited to 10,000 to 11,000 bases in length. ... The teams" findings show the West Nile Virus contains an icosahedral symmetry. The virus has no "visible" surface projections or spikes that are normally prominent on other envelope-containing viruses like influenza, HIV and measles.5A more in-depth view of the virus structure offered a cross sectional map. ... These immune cells function in an elaborate and many times repetitive effort of virus eradication by inhibiting the expansion of the virus. ... However, mice without either T cells or B cells could resis...
In 1957 they managed to isolate the influenza virus, common in Asia. ... Trygve Berge, who developed a safe vaccine for equine encephalitis, which affected horses and people, were major parts of our scientific and medical expansion. ... In 1970 vaccines to fight things like the Ebola virus and meningitis in camps were created. ...