Clinical signs of West Nile virus encephalomyelitis in horses during the outbreak in Israel in 2000

Between August and October 2000, 76 horses were reported by veterinary practitioners as having signs of a neurological disorder, varying from an involvement of the spinal cord alone to the entire central nervous system; 15 of the horses died or were euthanased as a result of their grave prognosis or secondary complications. At the same time, an outbreak of West Nile virus infection affected people and birds, principally domestic geese. West Nile virus was isolated from four of the horses with encephalomyelitis and five other horses seroconverted, indicating that the virus was the probable cause of the outbreak in horses. Three of the cases from which the virus was isolated are described briefly and one case is described in detail. This horse behaved abnormally and had general proprioceptive deficits in all four limbs. Its neurological condition deteriorated after two days and severe inspiratory dyspnoea due to a failure to abduct the arytenoids necessitated a tracheostomy. It died on the fourth day and histological lesions were observed in the brain stem and grey matter of the spinal cord.

[1]  E. Mendelson,et al.  Isolation and characterization of West Nile virus from the blood of viremic patients during the 2000 outbreak in Israel. , 2001, Emerging infectious diseases.

[2]  J. P. Durand,et al.  West Nile Virus Materials and Methods West Nile Outbreak in Horses in Southern France, 2000: the Return after 35 Years , 2022 .

[3]  E. Ostlund,et al.  West Nile virus encephalomyelitis in eight horses. , 2001, Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association.

[4]  D. Short,et al.  Use of steroids for acute spinal cord injury must be reassessed , 2000, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[5]  G Di Guardo,et al.  Clinical and neuropathological features of West Nile virus equine encephalomyelitis in Italy. , 2000, Equine veterinary journal.

[6]  Michael W. Parker,et al.  Origin of the West Nile virus responsible for an outbreak of encephalitis in the northeastern United States. , 1999, Science.

[7]  N. Olby Current concepts in the management of acute spinal cord injury. , 1999, Journal of veterinary internal medicine.

[8]  V. Deubel,et al.  Extensive nucleotide changes and deletions within the envelope glycoprotein gene of Euro-African West Nile viruses. , 1997, The Journal of general virology.

[9]  C. Kohn,et al.  Equine herpes myeloencephalopathy. , 1987, The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice.

[10]  Y. Akov,et al.  Prevalence of antibodies to arboviruses in various animals in Israel. , 1966, Bulletin of the World Health Organization.

[11]  J. R. Schmidt,et al.  NATURAL AND EXPERIMENTAL INFECTION OF EGYPTIAN EQUINES WITH WEST NILE VIRUS. , 1963, Annals of tropical medicine and parasitology.

[12]  T. P. Hughes,et al.  A neurotropic virus isolated from the blood of a native of Uganda , 1940 .