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Vaccination and Control Methods of West Nile Virus Infection in Equids and Humans

Parker M. Cendejas, Alan G. Goodman

2024Vaccines29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

West Nile virus (WNV) is capable of causing severe neurologic disease in both humans and equines, making it a disease of importance in both human medicine and veterinary medicine. No targeted treatments exist for WNV infection in either humans or equines. Infection is treated symptomatically through management of symptoms like fever and seizures. As treatment for WNV is purely supportive, the response to WNV has focused primarily on methods of disease prevention. To this end, research efforts have yielded several effective vaccines for equine use as well as numerous conventional mosquito control techniques. Even with the implementation of these techniques, disease caused by WNV remains a concern since no human vaccine exists. Due to the lack of a human vaccine, novel preventative strategies are under active research and development. Of these strategies, some of the most conceptually promising are techniques using genetically modified mosquitoes, addressing the disease at the vector level with minimal ecological side effects. Taken together, the use of combined, synergistic methods, such as physical barriers, transgenic mosquitoes, and immunological targets, will be the best way to prevent WNV disease.

Topics & Concepts

West Nile virusVaccinationDiseaseVirologyMedicineVector (molecular biology)Disease controlHuman diseaseVirusImmunologyBiologyPathologyRecombinant DNABiochemistryGeneMosquito-borne diseases and controlInsect symbiosis and bacterial influencesViral Infections and Vectors