A patient thought to be suffering from Nipah infection is moved to an isolation ward in Kozhikode Medical College in the southern state of Kerala, India,on July 20 (Picture: Reuters)
A student has died of brain-swelling fever caused by a virus on the World Health Organization watchlist.
The patient, 24, is the second person to die from a Nipah infection in the same town in southern India in three months, after a 14-year-old boy died in July.
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Officials said 151 people who were in contact with the student victim are now being monitored to check they don’t show symptoms, in order to control the spread.
There is no vaccine to prevent Nipah, and no treatment to cure it, with patients given supportive care but ultimately having to fight the illness off themselves.
Its fatality rate is estimated at between 40% and 70% of patients, and around 20% of those who survive are left with ongoing neurological problems such as seizures or personality changes.
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Although some people show no symptoms at all once infected, others develop fever and muscle pain, and in severe cases brain swelling, which can progress to a coma in 24 to 28 hours.