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Nipah Virus: The Immune System's Deadly Paradox
1 Feb
Summary
- Nipah virus lethality ranges from 40 to 75 percent.
- The virus suppresses early immune responses and causes inflammation.
- Early detection and containment are crucial for Nipah virus management.

Nipah virus poses a severe threat, boasting fatality rates between 40% and 75% in reported outbreaks. Its danger lies not only in its attack on vital organs but also in its manipulation of the human immune system. The virus adeptly suppresses early defenses, particularly interferon responses, allowing for rapid multiplication before an adequate immune reaction can occur.
As Nipah progresses, it targets the lining of blood vessels, inducing widespread inflammation. This vascular damage facilitates the virus's spread to multiple organs, including the brain. The resulting immune chaos leads to an overactive inflammatory response, tissue injury, and organ dysfunction, similar to but often more severe than cytokine storms.
Furthermore, Nipah infection leads to immune exhaustion, where key immune cells become overactivated and then functionally impaired. This prevents effective control of viral replication. Even the adaptive immune system struggles, with antibodies often generated too late to prevent significant organ damage, particularly in the brain, leading to severe encephalitis.




