any one of a group of inflammatory diseases of the human and animal brains caused mainly by viruses, bacteria, protozoans, and other pathogenic microorganisms.
A distinction is made between primary and secondary encephalitides. Primary encephalitides include diseases that develop after penetration of the brain by neurotropic viruses (epidemic encephalitis, Russian spring-summer encephalitis, Semliki forest encephalitis, herpes encephalitis, and zoster encephalitis). The existence of a natural reservoir of virus (usually rodents and birds), virus transmitters (mosquitoes and ticks), and associated natural focality and seasonality are characteristic of most primary encephalitides. The causative agents of primary encephalitides penetrate the brain through the blood and, less commonly, the nerve fibers.
Secondary encephalitides result from brain lesions caused by local or systemic infection, for example, rheumatism, influenza, measles, rubella, and chicken pox. Sensitization to the particular antigen produced by some infections seems to be the decisive factor in the development of secondary encephalitides. The inflammatory process may involve chiefly the white or gray matter of the brain (cranial nerves and subcortical ganglia), as in epidemic lethargic and Russian spring-summer encephalitides.
The course of most encephalitides is acute. The most common symptoms are elevated body temperature, headache, nausea, and vomiting; blackouts, convulsions, and other neurological disturbances (paresis and loss of sensitivity and cranial nerve function) frequently occur. Injury to the oculomotor nerves and drowsiness are characteristic of lethargic encephalitis (also called von Economo’s disease after C. von Economo, who described it). Hyperkinesia and other disorders are associated with rheumatic encephalitis. The acute stage is sometimes followed by the appearance of new or the intensification of existing neurological symptoms, for example, the development of postencephalic parkinsonism in epidemic encephalitis. The prognosis is unfavorable for sclerotic encephalitis, which occurs in young children and teen-agers and is characterized by loss of memory, mental retardation, epileptic seizures, and other symptoms. Purulent and necrotizing encephalitides, in which large portions of the brain die, also have an unfavorable prognosis.
Muscular weakness, numbness, and elevated body temperature persisting for several days usually appear in Russian spring-summer encephalitis ten to 12 days after the bite of an infected tick in a natural focus of the disease. Paresis or paralysis of the neck and shoulder muscles, involvement of cranial nerves, and symptoms of meningeal irritation are characteristic. The course of the disease is often mild.
Drugs with anti-inflammatory, antimicrobial, and desensitizing action (hormones, salicylates, antibiotics, sulfanilamides, dimedrol) are used to treat encephalitides. The prevention of encephalitides characterized by natural focality requires control of transmitters of the disease, immunization, and individual protection against ticks and mosquitoes (repellents, protective clothing).
V. A. KARLOV