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Encephalitis The disease. St. Louis Encephalitis is a viral disease of the brain and spinal cord obtained through a mosquito bite. Symptoms begin with a headache and may progress to a stiff neck and spine, fever, vomiting, sensitivity to light, drowsiness, seizures, coma, and possible death (less than 5% of cases). Infective individuals have such mild symptoms that they do not realize they are sick. Signs of illness may not appear for several weeks after infection. The elderly and young children are the most susceptible to developing a serious illness. The last outbreak in 1990 infected 213 people and caused 11 deaths. There were no human cases in Volusia County. The mosquito. The mosquito linked to St. Louis Encephalitis, Culex nigripalpus, is a plain brownish insect that lays egg rafts in water including artificial containers, polluted pools, roadside ditches, and rain-diluted salt marshes. It feeds at night, taking blood from birds, mammals and reptiles. If it bites a bird infected with encephalitis, it may pick up the virus and passes it to a human it bites later. Precautions:
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