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By 1938, EEE and WEE viruses were seen as natural causes of encephalitis in humans, and naturally acquired human infections with VEE virus were documented in Colombia in 1952. EEE is the most severe of the arboviral encephalitides, with case fatality rates of 50-70% and with neurologic damage common in survivors. WEE virus appears to be less neuroinvasive but has a pathology similar to that of EEE in patients with encephalitis. In contrast, severe encephalitis is rare in humans infected with VEE virus—except in children. In adults, the usual VEE syndrome is an acute, febrile, incapacitating disease with prolonged convalescence.

A live attenuated VEE vaccine can be used for horses, and a formalin-killed vaccine has been developed for use in humans. Formol-killed vaccine TC83VEE has been used for many years. Many areas like vector control, including chick or hamster sentinels are neglected, and thus epidemiologic actions are too slow. Virus antigens are needed for the operation of a warning system. What did some sentinel die of?