The Nipah virus was first discovered in 1999, following a severe outbreak of viral encephalitis among pig farm workers in Malaysia. The virus was thought to have spread from Pteropus bats to pigs, then from infected pigs to humans by close contact. Mortality of the disease was high at about 40%. The main necropsy finding was disseminated microinfarction associated with vasculitis and direct neuronal involvement. Relapsed encephalitis was seen in approximately 10% of those who survived the initial illness. Since its first recorded emergence in peninsular Malaysia, 10 outbreaks of Nipah virus encephalitis have been reported in Bangladesh and West Bengal in India. The outbreaks occurred from January to May, with Pteropus giganteus as the reservoir of the virus. In Bangladesh, evidence indicated that the virus transmitted directly from bats to human, with human to human transmission as an important mode of spread. The mortality of the illness was higher in Bangladesh which stood at around 70%. This was likely to be due to genetic variation of the virus.
Optic neuritis, which may be a precursor to multiple sclerosis (MS), is an uncommon disease in
Asian patients. The Asian Collaborative Longitudinal Optic Neuritis Epidemiology (ACLONE) is
an observational cohort study that assessed the risk of recurrent optic neuritis and/or progression
of further neurologic events, either MS or neuromyelitis optica (NMO) in Asian patients with firstever
optic neuritis. Secondary aims were to study the presenting characteristics and visual outcome,
and to identify risk factors for development of either MS or NMO. A total of 112 patients (25 men
and 87 women) aged from 12 to 61 years were recruited from Singapore, Taiwan, South Korea and
Malaysia. Of these, 94 (84%) had unilateral optic neuritis, with the right eye involved in 45 patients
and the left eye in 49 patients and the remaining 18 (16%) had bilateral optic neuritis. Follow up
data was available for 104 patients, and patients were followed for a median duration of 25.9 months.
Of these patients, 6 patients were adjudicated to have reached the primary endpoint (composite of
MS/NMO and optic neuritis): 3 patients with recurrent optic neuritis also subsequently experienced
neurologic symptoms, and 3 patients without recurrent eye involvement had neurologic symptoms.
Only one patient was considered to have prototypical MS, the other 5 were diagnosed with NMO,
all with subsequent antibody confirmation. Optic neuritis in Asian patients has significantly different
presenting characteristics from the classic description. However, in the majority of the patients it is
usually a benign disease, with good visual outcome and no further events.