Office of Sponsored Research and Programs
Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome (HPS) is a respiratory disease caused by a virus known as Sin Nombre Virus. The virus is carried by wild rodents, especially deer mice. The virus produces no clinical signs in the deer mice, but can produce a deadly infection in man - over 50% of human cases have been fatal.
Sin Nombre belongs a family of viruses known as Hantaviruses. Deer mice (genus Peromyscus) and other wild rodents can carry the virus without ill effect and can shed the virus in their urine, feces, and saliva. Sin Nombre virus is not associated with laboratory mice or with ordinary house mice or laboratory mice (genus Mus). Deer mice, in general, inhabit wild areas and rural rather than urban or suburban areas; you won’t find them in your kitchen in a city, but you might in a mountain cabin.
Humans become infected with the hantavirus when they inhale dust which has been contaminated with rodent urine. Most individuals who have become infected have lived or worked in areas that were heavily contaminated with rodent droppings. Campgrounds, abandoned cabins, and other areas that have become infested with high populations of wild rodents should be considered risky. Digging up a rodent nest, trapping wild rodents or performing necropsies on wild rodents would also be considered risky activities.
If a human being becomes infected, signs of illness usually appear about two weeks after exposure, although the time can range from a few days to as long as six weeks. The first signs are fever, headache, and pain in the abdomen, joints, and back. Afterwards the patient’s lungs begin to fill with fluid and breathing becomes extremely difficult. A high proportion of the patients die, but early treatment offers the best chance of survival.
If you develop symptoms that are suspicious of HPS, and you have worked with or been around wild rodents within the last six weeks, report this information to your physician immediately.
Most individuals who have contracted HPS have acquired the disease by living and sleeping in areas where there are large populations of rodents and copious quantities of dust contaminated with their feces. Confined spaces, such as rodent nests, abandoned cabins, or empty barns or pump houses that have been overrun with deer mice are the greatest potential risks.
In a research setting, there is also risk associated with individuals that work with wild rodents.
If you work with birds, and if you develop suspicious signs, you should report your illness to Taylor Health and Wellness Center (417-836-4000). If you have hantavirus, an accurate diagnosis and appropriate antibiotic therapy can dramatically shorten the illness and reduce its severity.
Every employee should know what to do in an emergency. Emergency phone numbers and evacuation plans should be posted in every department.
Taken from University of California-Davis: 2007