- Viliuisk Encephalomyelitis
Viliuisk Encephalomyelitis (VE) is a fatal progressive
neurological disorder found only in the Sakha (Iakut /Yakut) population of centralSiberia . Goldfarb, L.G. & Gajdusek, D.C. (1992) Viliuisk Encephalomyelitis in the Iakut people of Siberia. Brain, 115, 961. PMID 1393513] T.K. Oleksyk et al. 2004, European Journal of Immunogenetics 31, 121-128. PMID 15182325] About 15 new cases are reported each year. VE is a very rare disease and little research has been conducted. The causative agents, origin of the disease, and involved candidate genes are currently unknown, but much research has been done in pursuit of the answers.Those inflicted with the disease survive for a period of only a few months to several years. VE follows three main courses of infection: an acute form, a sub-acute form subsiding into aprogressive form, and a chronic form. Initially, theinfected patients experience symptoms such as: severeheadaches ,delirium ,lethargy ,meningism ,bradykinesia , and incoordination. A small percentage of patients die during the acute phase as result of a severecoma . In all cases the disease is fatal.Cases and Pathophysiology
As of 2007, less than 500 Yakut individuals have been
infected with VE.Stone, Richard. Siberia’s Deadly Stalker Emerges From the Shadows. www.sciencemag.org 26 April 2002 Vol 296 SCIENCE 642-645. PMID 11976423] Viliuisk Encephalomyelitis is classified as a progressiveneurological disorder that ultimately ends in the death of theinfected individual. The disease has three distinguishable phases: The acute form, the progressive form, and the chronic form.The acute form is the most rapid and most violent of all the stages. It begins with the characteristic
rigidity of the muscles, accompanied by slurred speech, severeheadaches , and exaggeration of cold-like symptoms. Patients usually die within weeks of the initial symptoms. Routinepost-mortem examinations yield: severeinflammation of the brain lining, clusters of dead cells and tissue, and largely increased amounts ofmacrophages andlymphocytes Mclean, C.A., Masters, C.L., Vladimirtsev, V.A., Prokhorova, I.A., Goldfarb, L.G., Asher, D.M., Vladimirtsev, A.I., Alekseev, V.P. & Gajdusek, D.C. (1997) Viliuisk encephalomyelitis--review of the spectrum of pathological changes. Neuropathy and Applied Neurobiology, 23, 212. PMID 9223130] .The progressive form is the most common case. Patients initially experience acute-like symptoms which are not as severe, and subside within a few weeks. Following the sub-acute phase, the patients experience a few mild symptoms including some behavioral changes, incoordination, and difficulty in speech. Eventually the disease developed fully and those infected were stricken with the characteristic symptoms of
rigidity , slurred speech, and deterioration ofcognitive functions . Ultimately, brain function depreciates rapidly resulting in death.Many patients who undergo the chronic form claim never to have had an acute attack. These patients endure varying measures of impairment and suffer mental deterioration for the remainder of their lives. Usually they live to be very old and succumb to other diseases.
In almost all cases there are changes characteristic of VE. Early onset shows an increased number of
lymphocytes and increasedprotein concentration — which reduces over many years. These factors help neurologists determine the form of VE based on progression. The trademark changes in the brain include: thickened inflamedmeninges , necrotic corticallesions , increased number oflymphocytes , andneuron al death.Garruto, R.M., Little, M.A., James, G.D. & Brown, B.D. (1999). natural experimental models: the global search for biomedical paradigms among traditional, modernizing, and modern populations. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA 96, 10536. PMID 10468644] .Disease Transmission and Nomenclature
Currently the mechanism of spread and infection is unknown despite the tedious epidemiological,
clinical , andneurological studies that have been conducted.Gajdusek DC, Goldfarb LG. Bibliography of Viliuisk Encephalomyelitis in the Iakut (Sakha) People of Siberia. 3rd edn. Bethesda, Maryland, USA: Laboratory of Ventral Nervous System Studies, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, national Institutes of Health, 1992.] Recent Studies showHorizontal Disease Transmission , or the transmission of a disease from one individual to another of the same generation. It appears that VE is aninfectious disease; however, theincubation period would have to be very extensive(in excess of 5 years). Many infected individuals attribute the initial symptoms as a result of a plunge in frigid waters. As of yet, no causative agent has been found in blood, spinal fluid, or brain tissue.Evenki populations of northern Siberia.World Health Organization . Program for Investigation of Viliuisk Encephalomyelitis in Collaboration with the Institute of Health, National Academy of Sciences, Sakha (Yakut) Republic, and a Group of International Experts. Geneva: W.H.O.; 1998. pp. 1 – 13.] The disease had it’s debut through its firstIakut diagnosis a little over a century ago in villages of the Viuli region of Siberia. Not until after World War II did the Yakut people become aware of this mysterious killer. The locals and Northern Evenkis referred to this illness as “Bokhoror” or “the stiffness” because of the typicalrigidity of the limbs those infected individuals experienced. Viliuisk Encephalomyelitis is currently isolated in the Iakut (Sakha) populations of Siberia, Russia. However, extensive migration might allow the disease to become a continentalepidemic as it has already spread theinfection radius many miles since its induction in the early 1900s.Fifty years ago it was believed that the Iakut people had extremely degraded immune systems as result of malnourishment and starvation from the World War. It was believed that this disease was docile and those with healthy immune systems could easily fight it off. This inclination appeared to be accurate until a case of a single Caucasian Russian woman. Supposedly, she infected herself as a means to end her own life. She injected herself with cerebrospinal fluid of a victim of VE, and died as a result of it. This is the first and only reported infection and death of a Caucasian.
References
External links
* [http://brain.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/115/4/961 Viliuisk Encephalomyelitis in the Iakut People of Siberia]
* [http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/296/5568/642 Siberia's Deadly Stalker Emerges from the Shadows]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.