Why in the news?
- The declining immunity against Japanese Encephalitis is leading to increased threat of Dengue fever.
Japanese Encephalitis
- What is it?:
- It is a vector-borne viral disease caused by the Japanese Encephalitis Virus (JEV).
- First identified in Japan in 1935, now endemic across 24 countries in the WHO South-East Asia and Western Pacific regions.
- Major cause of viral encephalitis in Asia.
- Cause and Transmission:
- Virus: Flavivirus (same family as Dengue, Zika, Yellow Fever).
- Transmission Vector: Culex mosquitoes, especially Culex tritaeniorhynchus.
- Reservoirs: Pigs & water birds (amplifying hosts).
- Humans: “Dead-end hosts” (cannot spread infection further).
- Symptoms:
- Most infections are asymptomatic.
- Severe cases: High fever, headache, seizures, disorientation, coma.
- Case fatality: 20–30%.
- Neurological sequelae: 30–50% survivors develop long-term disabilities (paralysis, cognitive impairment).
- In India:
- Endemic in Assam, Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, West Bengal, Odisha.
- Major outbreaks: Uttar Pradesh & Bihar (notably Gorakhpur region).
- Outbreaks common in monsoon & post-monsoon periods due to waterlogging.
- Control Measures by GoI:
- National Vector Borne Disease Control Programme (NVBDCP) – umbrella programme for JE along with malaria, dengue, etc.
- Intensified JE–AES Control Programme (2014):
- Vector control (fogging, larvicides, source reduction).
- Vaccination drives.
- Early case detection & referral.
- Safe drinking water & sanitation.
- JE Vaccination:
- SA 14-14-2 (Live Attenuated Vaccine) used widely.
- It has been integrated into the Universal Immunisation Programme (UIP) since 2006.
- Focus on children (1–15 years age group).
- AES-Je management centres in endemic districts for treatment & rehabilitation.
Dengue
- What is it?:
- It is a mosquito-borne viral disease caused by the Dengue Virus (DENV), belonging to the Flavivirus genus.
- First identified in the 18th century; now one of the most prevalent vector-borne diseases globally.
- WHO classifies dengue as a neglected tropical disease of major global concern.
- Cause and Transmission:
- Virus: Four serotypes (DENV-1, DENV-2, DENV-3, DENV-4).
- Transmission Vector: Female Aedes aegypti (primary) and Aedes albopictus.
- Transmission cycle: Human–mosquito–human (unlike Japanese Encephalitis, which involves animal reservoirs).
- High-risk period: Post-monsoon due to water stagnation.
- Symptoms:
- Classical Dengue Fever: Sudden high fever, severe headache, retro-orbital pain, muscle and joint pain (“breakbone fever”), rash.
- Severe Dengue (Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever / Dengue Shock Syndrome): plasma leakage, severe bleeding, organ impairment, shock.
- Mortality: Less than 1% with proper treatment but up to 20% without.
- In India:
- Endemic across most states, especially Delhi, UP, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Maharashtra, West Bengal.
- Recurrent outbreaks during monsoon & post-monsoon.
- Treatment:
- No specific antiviral treatment.
- Supportive therapy: fluid replacement, monitoring for shock, paracetamol (avoid NSAIDs like aspirin).
- Vaccine: Dengvaxia (first licensed dengue vaccine, Sanofi, 2015) – limited use; WHO recommends only for seropositive individuals.
- Indian trials ongoing for indigenous vaccines.
- Control Measures by GoI:
- National Vector Borne Disease Control Programme (NVBDCP): umbrella programme for dengue, malaria, JE, etc.
- Integrated Disease Surveillance Programme (IDSP): tracks outbreaks and spread.
- National Dengue Day (May 16) – awareness campaign.
- Public Health Measures:
- Source reduction (anti-larval measures, eliminating stagnant water).
- Fogging and spraying during outbreaks.
- Community participation through “Dry Day” initiatives.