Eastern Equine Encephalitis Hits New England

2005 ◽  
Vol 39 (10) ◽  
pp. 19
Author(s):  
HEIDI SPLETE
2021 ◽  
pp. 10.1212/CPJ.0000000000001079
Author(s):  
Mayra Montalvo ◽  
Dana Ayoub ◽  
Michael McGary ◽  
Katrina Byrd ◽  
Leana Mahmoud ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTPurposeof review: To describe the clinical presentation, diagnosis, management and outcomes of four confirmed Eastern Equine Encephalitis (EEE) cases and a review of the literatureRecent findings:There was a sharp rise in the number of EEE cases in the US in 2019, with 38 confirmed cases and 15 deaths. Our institution cared for 10% of patients with neuro-invasive EEE nationwide. These were the first cases seen locally since 2010.Summary:EEE virus causes one of the most lethal types of arboviral encephalitis in the US with a mortality of 30-40%. Manifestations of EEE infections can range from mild encephalopathy to coma. Common findings include CSF pleocytosis and involvement of the basal ganglia on MRI. Given the rarity of this disease and nonspecific findings, diagnosis can be challenging and a high clinical suspicion is important. Management is mainly supportive and the use of IVIg remains controversial. Two of our four patients died; these patients had coma within 48 hours, hyponatremia, involvement of bilateral thalami and brainstem, status epilepticus, and severe brain dysfunction in EEG.


Author(s):  
John-Paul Mutebi ◽  
Abigail A Mathewson ◽  
Susan P Elias ◽  
Sara Robinson ◽  
Alan C Graham ◽  
...  

Abstract Vertebrate surveillance for eastern equine encephalitis virus (EEEV) activity usually focuses on three types of vertebrates: horses, passerine birds, and sentinel chicken flocks. However, there is a variety of wild vertebrates that are exposed to EEEV infections and can be used to track EEEV activity. In 2009, we initiated a pilot study in northern New England, United States, to evaluate the effectiveness of using wild cervids (free-ranging white-tailed deer and moose) as spatial sentinels for EEEV activity. In Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont during 2009–2017, we collected blood samples from hunter-harvested cervids at tagging stations and obtained harvest location information from hunters. U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention processed the samples for EEEV antibodies using plaque reduction neutralization tests (PRNTs). We detected EEEV antibodies in 6 to 17% of cervid samples in the different states and mapped cervid EEEV seropositivity in northern New England. EEEV antibody-positive cervids were the first detections of EEEV activity in the state of Vermont, in northern Maine, and northern New Hampshire. Our key result was the detection of the antibodies in areas far outside the extent of documented wild bird, mosquito, human case, or veterinary case reports of EEEV activity in Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont. These findings showed that cervid (deer and moose) serosurveys can be used to characterize the geographic extent of EEEV activity, especially in areas with low EEEV activity or with little or no EEEV surveillance. Cervid EEEV serosurveys can be a useful tool for mapping EEEV activity in areas of North America in addition to northern New England.


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