Nipah virus Discovered in Two bat species at Maharashtra – News2IN
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Nipah virus Discovered in Two bat species at Maharashtra

Nipah virus Discovered in Two bat species at Maharashtra
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MUMBAI/PUNE: The deadly Nipah virus was observed in two types of rodents in Maharashtra for the very first time by scientists in the Pune-based National Institute of Virology (NIV).
Even the Nipah-carrying bats were seen at a cave in Mahabaleshwar at Satara at March 2020.
Dr Pragya Yadav, the study’s lead researcher, told TOI that not one of those bat colonies in Maharashtra had shown exposure to Nipah.
The virus, normally seen in rodents, features at the top 10 priority listing of pathogens characterized by the World Health Organisation, and its transmission to humans has led to deadly outbreaks throughout the world.
The NIV findings have been published recently in the peer reviewed and found’Journal of Illness and Public Health’.
The report says that India has seen four Nipah outbreaks (see box) up to now.
Nipah is deemed dangerous because there’s not any medication or disease, and the passing rate is large.
Though the case fatality rate in Covid is only between 1 percent and 2 percent in most Indian nations, CFR at Nipah illnesses ranges between 65% and 100 percent.
In the past few decades, bats are found to some other dangerous viruses like Ebola and Marburg who have resulted in outbreaks.
Even the Covid pandemic, also, is thought to be connected to bats.
The NIV team appeared in Pteropus medius, Rousettus leschenaultii and Pipistrellus pipistrellus bats which are typical in India.
It immobilized 65 leschenaultii along with 15 pipistrellus nerves and accumulated blood, throat and rectal swabs from the Mahabaleshwar cave in the anaesthetised bats.
Detailed laboratory work revealed anti-NiV Compounds in 33 leschenaultii along with one Pipistrellus bat sample.
“In investigations throughout the past ten years, NiV (Nipah) action couldn’t be found in leschenaultia bats, even though communicating a few hundred bats, such as bats from exactly the identical place,” stated the study paper.
Thus, leschenaultii bats have been found to harbour Nipah to the very first time in India.
“The roost that was faked was conservative and the virus could have been circulating at elevated levels rather than discovered during previous experiments,” said Yadav.
Instead, she explained, the virus might have been recently introduced from medius into leschenaultii bats.The team is not concerned about the pipistrellus bats.
“Their function in virus spillover to individuals seems distant since they are insectivorous,” said Yadav.
As they discussed the identical habitat since the leschenaultii batsthey tested positive.

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