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Hantavirus Glossary

Definitions of the most relevant medical and epidemiological terms.

A

Aerosolization
The process by which dried rodent excreta become airborne particles that can be inhaled, representing the primary transmission route for hantaviruses. Read more →
Andes virus
A hantavirus endemic to South America, notable for being the only hantavirus with documented person-to-person transmission. Causes HPS with a case fatality rate of approximately 30-40%. Read more →

C

Capillary leak
A pathological increase in vascular permeability that allows plasma to escape into surrounding tissues, a hallmark of severe hantavirus infection leading to edema and shock. Read more →
Case fatality rate
The proportion of diagnosed cases that result in death. For HPS it ranges from 30-50%, while HFRS varies from less than 1% to 15% depending on the causative virus. Read more →

D

Dialysis
A medical procedure that filters waste and excess fluid from the blood when the kidneys fail, sometimes required in severe HFRS cases with renal involvement. Read more →
Diuresis
The phase of increased urine production that signals renal recovery in HFRS, typically occurring after the oliguric phase and indicating improving kidney function. Read more →
Dobrava-Belgrade virus
A hantavirus found in southeastern Europe carried by the yellow-necked mouse, causing the most severe form of HFRS in Europe with case fatality rates up to 12%. Read more →

E

ECMO
Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, a life-support technique that oxygenates blood outside the body, used as a last-resort treatment for severe HPS when lungs can no longer function. Read more →
ELISA
Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, a serological test used to detect IgM and IgG antibodies against hantaviruses in patient serum, serving as the primary diagnostic method. Read more →
Endemic
Describes a disease that is regularly found in a particular geographic area or population, as hantaviruses are endemic in regions where their specific rodent hosts are established. Read more →

H

Hantaan virus
The prototype hantavirus first isolated in South Korea near the Hantaan River, carried by the striped field mouse and causing severe HFRS with up to 15% mortality. Read more →
HFRS (Hemorrhagic Fever with Renal Syndrome)
A clinical syndrome caused by Old World hantaviruses characterized by fever, hemorrhage, and acute kidney injury progressing through febrile, hypotensive, oliguric, diuretic, and convalescent phases. Read more →
HPS (Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome)
A severe respiratory disease caused by New World hantaviruses, characterized by rapid onset of pulmonary edema and cardiogenic shock with a case fatality rate of 30-50%. Read more →

I

IgM
Immunoglobulin M, the first antibody class produced during acute hantavirus infection. Its presence in serum indicates recent or active infection and is the basis for early serological diagnosis. Read more →
IgG
Immunoglobulin G, an antibody class that appears after IgM and persists long-term, indicating past infection or immune memory. A rising IgG titer confirms recent hantavirus exposure. Read more →
Incubation period
The time between hantavirus exposure and symptom onset, typically 1-5 weeks with an average of 2-3 weeks, though cases with incubation up to 8 weeks have been reported. Read more →

L

Laguna Negra virus
A hantavirus identified in Paraguay and Bolivia, carried by the vesper mouse, associated with HPS cases in the Gran Chaco region of South America. Read more →

O

Oliguria
Abnormally low urine output indicating acute kidney injury, a characteristic phase of HFRS where daily urine volume drops below 400 mL due to renal damage. Read more →
Outbreak
An occurrence of disease cases in excess of what would normally be expected in a defined area or population, often triggered by environmental changes that increase human-rodent contact. Read more →

P

PPE (Personal Protective Equipment)
Protective gear including N95 respirators, gloves, and goggles recommended when cleaning rodent-infested areas or handling potentially contaminated materials to prevent hantavirus inhalation. Read more →
Prodrome
The initial phase of hantavirus illness presenting with nonspecific symptoms such as fever, myalgia, and fatigue, typically lasting 3-5 days before progression to the cardiopulmonary or renal phase. Read more →
Pulmonary edema
Accumulation of fluid in the lungs caused by increased capillary permeability, the defining and most dangerous feature of HPS that can lead to respiratory failure within hours. Read more →
Puumala virus
A hantavirus carried by the bank vole across Europe, causing nephropathia epidemica, a mild form of HFRS with less than 1% fatality rate and predominantly renal symptoms. Read more →

R

Reservoir host
The animal species that maintains a virus in nature without becoming ill. Each hantavirus is associated with a specific rodent reservoir that sheds virus chronically in urine, feces, and saliva. Read more →
Rodent excreta
Urine, droppings, and saliva from infected rodents that contain viable hantavirus particles. When disturbed and aerosolized, these materials become the primary source of human infection. Read more →
Rodent exclusion
Prevention strategies that seal entry points and eliminate attractants to keep rodents out of human dwellings, considered the most effective long-term measure against hantavirus exposure. Read more →
RT-PCR
Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction, a molecular technique that detects hantavirus RNA in blood or tissue samples, providing definitive identification of the infecting virus species. Read more →

S

Seoul virus
A globally distributed hantavirus carried by brown and black rats, causing moderate HFRS. Its association with urban rats makes it the only hantavirus with worldwide distribution. Read more →
Seroprevalence
The proportion of a population that has antibodies against hantavirus, indicating past exposure. Studies reveal that many infections are mild or subclinical and go undiagnosed. Read more →
Sin Nombre virus
The primary cause of HPS in North America, carried by the deer mouse. First identified during the 1993 Four Corners outbreak, it has a case fatality rate of approximately 36%. Read more →
Surveillance
The systematic collection, analysis, and interpretation of health data to detect outbreaks early, track disease trends, and guide public health interventions for hantavirus control. Read more →

T

Thrombocytopenia
An abnormally low platelet count in the blood, a consistent laboratory finding in hantavirus infections that contributes to hemorrhagic manifestations and serves as an early diagnostic clue. Read more →

V

Ventilation protocol
Procedures for airing out enclosed spaces before cleaning to reduce airborne hantavirus concentration, typically requiring cross-ventilation for at least 30 minutes before entry. Read more →
Viral load
The quantity of hantavirus RNA detectable in a patient's blood, which correlates with disease severity and can be measured by quantitative RT-PCR during the acute phase of illness. Read more →

Z

Zoonosis
An infectious disease transmitted from animals to humans. Hantavirus is a zoonosis maintained in rodent populations and transmitted primarily through inhalation of aerosolized excreta. Read more →