UMEM Educational Pearls

Title: Japanese Encephalitis

Category: International EM

Keywords: japanese encephalitis, international, virus, infectious disease (PubMed Search)

Posted: 2/20/2013 by Andrea Tenner, MD (Updated: 11/22/2024)
Click here to contact Andrea Tenner, MD

Japanese Encephalitis

 
General Information:
     – caused by Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV), closely related to West Nile virus    
     – transmission is through infected mosquito
     – most common cause of vaccine-preventable cause of encephalitis in Asia
     – Incubation period is 5-15 days
     – <1% develop clinical, disease, most asymptomatic
     – Acute encephalitis most common presentation 
     – Sx: altered mental status, focal neuro deficits, movement disorder, seizure, fever, headache,    
         vomiting
     – Classic presentation: Parkinsonian syndrome with mask-like facies, tremor, cogwheel rigidity, and
        choreoathtoid movements
     – case-fatality is 20-30%
 
Area of the world affected:
     -- Primarily in Asia – China, Japan, Korea, India, Southeast Asia
 
Relevance to the US physician:
1. JE
      -- Should be considered in patients concerned for neurological infection with recent travel to
          endemic country
      -- Lab: JEV-specific IgM in serum (after 7 days of sx onset) or CSF (after 4 days of sx onset)
      -- Viral culture and other viral RNA amplifications tests are not sensitive
      -- Treatment is supportive
      -- In survivors, 30-50% have significant neurological/cognitive/psychological sequelae
2. Vaccine
      -- One vaccine (Ixiaro) is available in the US    
      -- 2 doses, 28 days apart (96% develop immunity)
      -- No information on duration of protection
      -- Recommended for travelers ≥ 1 month in endemic areas during JEV season
 
Bottom Line:
Very rare but deadly disease with high mortality and post-infection sequelae.  Think about it in travelers to Asia during summer/fall seasons who have not been immunized.
 
University of Maryland Section of Global Emergency Health
Author:  Veronica Pei
 

References

http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/yellowbook/2012/chapter-3-infectious-diseases-related-to-travel/japanese-encephalitis.htm#2473