Case‐Control Study of Risk Factors for Human Infection with a New Zoonotic Paramyxovirus, Nipah Virus, during a 1998–1999 Outbreak of Severe Encephalitis in Malaysia

Umesh D. Parashar(National Center for Infectious Diseases), Lye Munn Sunn(Ministry of Health), Flora Ong(Forest Department Sarawak), Anthony W. Mounts(National Center for Infectious Diseases), Mohamad Arif(Ministry of Health), Thomas G. Ksiazek(National Center for Infectious Diseases), Muhammad Amir Kamaluddin(Ministry of Health), Amal Nasir Mustafa(Ministry of Health), Hanjeet Kaur(Ministry of Health), Lay Ming Ding(Public Health Institute), Ghazali Othman(Malaysia Theological Seminary), Hayati M. Radzi(Forest Department Sarawak), Paul Kitsutani(National Center for Infectious Diseases), Patrick C. Stockton(National Center for Infectious Diseases), John T Arokiasamy(University of Malaya), Howard E. Gary(National Center for Infectious Diseases), Larry J. Anderson(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)
The Journal of Infectious Diseases
May 1, 2000
Cited by 345Open Access
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Abstract

An outbreak of encephalitis affecting 265 patients (105 fatally) occurred during 1998-1999 in Malaysia and was linked to a new paramyxovirus, Nipah, that infected pigs, humans, dogs, and cats. Most patients were pig farmers. Clinically undetected Nipah infection was noted in 10 (6%) of 166 community-farm controls (persons from farms without reported encephalitis patients) and 20 (11%) of 178 case-farm controls (persons from farms with encephalitis patients). Case patients (persons with Nipah infection) were more likely than community-farm controls to report increased numbers of sick/dying pigs on the farm (59% vs. 24%, P=.001) and were more likely than case-farm controls to perform activities requiring direct contact with pigs (86% vs. 50%, P=.005). Only 8% of case patients reported no contact with pigs. The outbreak stopped after pigs in the affected areas were slaughtered and buried. Direct, close contact with pigs was the primary source of human Nipah infection, but other sources, such as infected dogs and cats, cannot be excluded.


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