All Posts Tagged With: "Kristy Murray"

West Nile Virus May Persist for Years

Excerpt:

November 10, 2010 (Atlanta, Georgia) — West Nile virus (WNV) might persist for years after acute infection, resulting in long-term neurological consequences in more people than previously thought, a new study suggests.

Kristy Murray, DVM, PhD, from the University of Texas School of Public Health, in Houston, presented the findings here at the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 59th Annual Meeting.

“West Nile virus is not just an acute disease,” Dr. Murray told Medscape Medical News. “Patients who have the neuroinvasive form of disease will more than likely have long-term symptoms and sequelae,” she said. “This is a major finding, considering that more than 1.7 million Americans have been exposed since this virus first came to the United States in 1999,” she added.

WNV infection is generally asymptomatic, but a neuroinvasive variant that can result in encephalitis, meningitis, and acute flaccid paralysis occurs in approximately 1 in 150 infected individuals, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta, Georgia.

Dr. Murray and colleagues initially observed that a larger than expected number of patients who presented with WNV infections were experiencing progressive neurological disease or kidney failure. They subsequently investigated long-term outcome in 151 patients with WNV in Houston beginning in 2002.

Of patients who presented with encephalitis, 77% had abnormal neurological findings, and 23% exhibited renal disease (including 5 deaths from renal failure).

Previously, the researchers found that 5 of 25 subjects tested positive for WNV viral particles in the urine. The current analysis indicated that 34 of 81 subjects (42%) had persistent WNV viral shedding in the urine. Of those patients, 65% had proteinuria and 13% developed renal failure.