Kyasanur forest disease

Disease/Syndrome
Kyasanur forest disease
Category
Infection, Occupational
Acute/Chronic
Acute-Severe (life-threatening)
Synonyms
KFD
Biomedical References
Comments
INITIAL SYMPTOMS:
Severe flu-like illness with fever, vomiting, diarrhea, low back and limb pain, prostration, conjunctivitis, and sore throat; [CCDM]

This tickborne viral infection may cause marked leukopenia and thrombocytopenia. Hemorrhages and shock are seen in severe cases. Patients may have low back and limb pain, conjunctivitis, cervical lymphadenopathy, sore throat, and papulovesicular eruptions may occur. Some patients have a biphasic course with neurological symptoms (severe headache, mental disturbances, tremors, and visual deficits) developing 1-2 weeks after the initial febrile period. The case-fatality rate varies from 3-5%. A vaccine is available. Ticks are reservoirs. Rodents, shrews, and monkeys are amplifiers. [CCDM, p. 43-6] Findings may include hemorrhage, thrombocytopenia, encephalitis, myocarditis, pneumonitis, and retinal lesions. [Guerrant, p. 444-6, 514] Patients initially have a flu-like illness with vomiting. The first phase of illness may also include lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, petechiae, and hemorrhages. After a 1-2 week remission, neurological symptoms develop. Lab findings include elevated liver enzymes. Hemorrhagic pulmonary edema occurs in 40% of cases and acute renal failure in severe cases. [PPID, p. 1897]

For updated text and symptoms of infectious diseases, see iddx.com.
Latency/Incubation
3-7 days (range of 1-12 days); [CCDM]
Diagnostic
PCR; Culture; Antigen detection; Paired sera; [CCDM]
ICD-9 Code
065.2
ICD-10 Code
A98.2
Available Vaccine
Yes

Symptoms/Findings, Job Tasks, and Agents Linked to This Disease

Agents

Hazardous agents that cause the occupational disease: