SHORT REPORT: First encounter of European bat lyssavirus type 2 (EBLV-2) in a bat in Finland

In Finland, rabies in bats was suspected for the first time in 1985 when a bat researcher, who had multiple bat bites, died in Helsinki. The virus isolated from the researcher proved to be antigenically related to rabies viruses previously detected in German bats. Later, the virus was typed as EBLV-...

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Veröffentlicht in:Epidemiology and infection 2010-11, Vol.138 (11), p.1581-1585
Hauptverfasser: JAKAVA-VILJANEN, M., LILLEY, T., KYHERÖINEN, E.-M., HUOVILAINEN, A.
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container_issue 11
container_start_page 1581
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creator JAKAVA-VILJANEN, M.
LILLEY, T.
KYHERÖINEN, E.-M.
HUOVILAINEN, A.
description In Finland, rabies in bats was suspected for the first time in 1985 when a bat researcher, who had multiple bat bites, died in Helsinki. The virus isolated from the researcher proved to be antigenically related to rabies viruses previously detected in German bats. Later, the virus was typed as EBLV-2b. Despite an epidemiological study in bats 1986 and subsequent rabies surveillance, rabies in bats was not detected in Finland until the first case in a Daubenton's bat (Myotis daubentonii) was confirmed in August 2009. The bat was paralysed, occasionally crying, and biting when approached; it subsequently tested positive for rabies. The virus was genetically typed as EBLV-2. This is the northernmost case of bat rabies ever detected in Europe. Phylogenetic analyses showed that the EBLV-2b isolate from the human case in 1985 and the isolate from the bat in 2009 were genetically closely related, demonstrating that EBLV-2 may have been circulating in Finland for many years.
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source JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; PubMed Central
subjects Bats
Genotypes
Infections
Lyssavirus
Phylogenetics
Rabies
Rabies and pseudorabies
Rabies virus
Sequence analysis
Sequencing
Viruses
title SHORT REPORT: First encounter of European bat lyssavirus type 2 (EBLV-2) in a bat in Finland
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