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Pathogenesis:
- Infection is usually of sheep with sporadic cases in cattle, deer or elk. - Infected saliva from the tick, Ixodes ricinus, then biphasic disease. - 1st phase a pyrexia (>42degC or 106degF), the viraemia, the virus attached to Fc receptors. - The animal then returns to normal and may completely recover. - 2nd phase involves localisation in the CNS with trembling, torticollis, irregular gait, 'louping ill'; then death or disability. - Lesions are prevalent around the Purkinje cells of the cerebellum, in the motor nuclei of the brain stem, and the ventral horns of the spinal cord. - In man, infection only results in influenza - like symptoms, sometimes with a coma, but recovery is expected. - Grouse and small rodents eg shrews die from the disease. |