Japanese encephalitis differential diagnosis
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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1] Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Anthony Gallo, B.S. [2]
Overview
Differentiating Japanese encephalitis from Other Diseases
Japanese encephalitis must be differentiated from other diseases that cause fever, headache, and vomiting, such as:[1][2][3]
Disease | Findings |
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West Nile encephalitis | West Nile encephalitis presents with acute inflammation of the brain, caused by an arboviral infection; West Nile encephalitis may present with include fever, nausea, headache, stiff neck, photophobia, seizures, and coma. |
St. Louis encephalitis | St. Louis encephalitis presents with acute inflammation of the brain, caused by an arboviral infection; St. Louis encephalitis may present with fever, nausea, headache, malaise, photophobia, seizures, and coma. |
Other Vector-Borne encephalitis | Vector-borne encephalitis presents with acute inflammation of the brain, caused by a bacterial infection or arboviral infection; complications include severe brain damage as the inflamed brain pushes against the skull, potentially leading to mortality. |
Viral encephalitis | Viral encephalitis presents with acute inflammation of the brain, caused by a viral infection; complications include severe brain damage as the inflamed brain pushes against the skull, potentially leading to mortality. |
Encephalopathy | Encephalopathy presents with steady depression, generalized seizures. Generally absent are fever, headache, leukocytosis, and pleocytosis; MRI often appears normal. |
Meningitis | Meningitis presents with headache, altered mental status, and inflammation of the meninges, which may develop in the setting of an infection, physical injury, cancer, or certain drugs; it may have an indolent evolution, resolving on its own, or may present as an rapidly evolving inflammation, causing neurologic damage and possible mortality. |
Malaria | Malaria presents with a fever, which commonly occurs in paroxysms, separated by fever-free time intervals. Other symptoms include chills, headache, nausea, vomiting, and weakness. |
Primary central nervous system lymphoma | Primary central nervous system lymphoma presents with headache, nausea, monocular vision loss, myalgia, and seizures. |
References
- ↑ M.D. JE, Dolin R, Blaser MJ. Mandell, Douglas, and Bennett's Principles and Practice of Infectious Diseases, Expert Consult Premium Edition. Saunders; 2014.
- ↑ Kennedy PG (2004). "Viral encephalitis: causes, differential diagnosis, and management". J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 75 Suppl 1: i10–5. PMC 1765650. PMID 14978145.
- ↑ Arboviral Infections (arthropod-borne encephalitis, eastern equine encephalitis, St. Louis encephalitis, California encephalitis, Powassan encephalitis, West Nile encephalitis). New York State Department of Health (2006). https://www.health.ny.gov/diseases/communicable/arboviral/fact_sheet.htm Accessed on February 23, 2016