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West Nile virus (WNV), West Nile fever, West Nile neuroinvasive disease
Mosquito-transmitted acute meningoencephalitis
Head CT usually normal
MR with DWI, T1 C+
Classic: Bilateral basal ganglia, thalamic hyperintensity
Patchy, poorly demarcated hyperintense foci in cerebral white matter on T2WI/FLAIR
Enhancement usually absent (has been reported)
DWI may show restricted diffusion
Other sites of involvement
Brainstem
Corpus callosum splenium
Mesial temporal lobes
Cerebellum
Spinal cord, cauda equina
WNV: Flavivirus (like Japanese encephalitis)
Arthropod-transmitted (mosquito)
~ 1/140 patients infected with WNV develop CNS symptoms
Incubation period: 3-14 days
~ 80% of infected individuals asymptomatic
Mild febrile syndrome (West Nile fever) in 20%
Meningoencephalitis in < 1%
Rare: Anterior myelitis
CNS symptoms more common in diabetics, immunocompromised
Treatment is supportive; hydration, antipyretics, airway and seizure management as indicated
No human vaccine
Best way to prevent infection? Fight the bite
Mortality rate is ~ 10%
. Posterior limb of left internal capsule is also involved
.
, more pronounced on the left with no abnormal enhancement. Anatomic areas commonly affected by West Nile encephalitis are basal ganglia, thalami, brainstem, mesial temporal structures, and cerebellum.
. There is subtle hyperintensity in the basal ganglia and right internal capsule
.
West Nile virus (WNV), West Nile fever (WNF), West Nile neuroinvasive disease (WNND)
Mosquito-transmitted acute meningoencephalitis caused by West Nile arbovirus
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