Key points
- Japanese encephalitis is caused by a virus primarily spread to people through the bite of an infected mosquito.
- Japanese encephalitis virus is maintained in the environment between mosquitoes and other animals, namely wading birds and pigs.
- People do not spread the infection other than rarely through blood transfusions.
Primary cause
Japanese encephalitis is caused by a virus that is found in Asia and the western Pacific.
The virus belongs to a group of viruses called flaviviruses. Other flaviviruses cause similar disease, including West Nile virus, St. Louis encephalitis virus, tick-borne encephalitis virus, and Powassan virus.
How it spreads
- Japanese encephalitis virus circulates in the environment between mosquitoes (primarily Culex species) and other animals, namely wading birds and pigs.
- People become infected with the virus when mosquitoes feed on other infected animals and then bite people.
- People are considered dead-end hosts meaning they do not develop high enough levels of virus in their bloodstream and cannot pass the virus on to other biting mosquitoes.
- The virus is not transmitted from person-to-person, except rarely by blood transfusion.
- Because the virus can be transmitted through blood, persons who were recently diagnosed with Japanese encephalitis virus infection should not donate blood and bone marrow for 120 days following infection.
- The virus is not transmitted from person-to-person, except rarely by blood transfusion.
- The virus is not transmitted directly from person-to-person and is not spread:
- Through coughing, sneezing, or touching
- By touching live animals
- From handling live or dead infected animals. Avoid bare-handed contact when handling any dead animal. If you are disposing of a dead animal, use gloves or double plastic bags to place the carcass in a garbage can.
- Through eating infected animals. Always follow instructions for fully cooking meat.
- Through coughing, sneezing, or touching
- Prevent getting sick with Japanese encephalitis by preventing mosquito bites and getting vaccinated before traveling, if vaccination is recommended for you.