Link with cases in Bengal, Bihar being probed

June 12, 2014 10:38 am | Updated November 17, 2021 01:34 am IST - Kolkata:

Blood samples of victims of a purported viral infection in West Bengal’s Malda district that left seven children dead in a week are being sent for tests to ascertain if these are linked to deaths in Bihar, official sources said Wednesday.

The sources said the samples are being sent to Pune’s National Institute of Virology to determine the causative organism whose “exact identity” has eluded researchers so far and is being associated with the consumption of the litchi fruit.

The children, aged between two and four years, died due to swelling of brain (encephalitis), according to doctors at the Malda Medical College and Hospital (MMCH) in West Bengal.

They exhibited a sudden onset of fever, convulsions and succumbed within five to six hours of the appearance of the symptoms. In Bihar, 44 deaths due to acute encephalitis syndrome (AES) have been reported from six districts over the past fortnight.

A team of experts from Calcutta School of Tropical Medicine (CSTM) here visited the area in Bengal recently to collect samples. Dubbed as the “litchi syndrome” by the local health workers, the “unknown strain” is thought to spread from litchi fruits, though there is no concrete proof yet, according to a member of the inspecting team.

So far, the collected samples have tested negative for Japanese encephalitis (JE), chikungunya and dengue virus. Additional tests for other strains will be done at Pune.

“We think it is a virus because it spreads in a small area. However, we can say for sure only after the final tests. Once we get the results in the next seven to 10 days from Pune, we can determine if at all it spread from litchi,” Rahman, assistant professor at CSTM’s Tropical Medicine unit, told IANS.

“Most importantly, the attempt will be to identify any links with the Bihar children deaths,” he said.

What is more intriguing is that the victims were hypoglycemic, that is, they had an abnormally low blood glucose content. This condition in under—nourished children could have been triggered by a toxic substance called methylenecyclopropyl—glycine (MCPG) found in litchi fruits, according to the experts.

Concerned about the large number of suspected encephalitis deaths in the country, Health Minister Harsh Vardhan Tuesday asked officials to target 100 per cent immunization of children.

The Health Minister said the drive to eradicate encephalitis should replicate the Pulse Polio campaign.

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